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Typically active speakers are not DIY due to the effort needed to properly design the overall product and the cost to produce a presentable speaker. Hobbyists types that just pull together favorite amps and drivers fail to get an optimal design. Major R&D efforts from leading companies like JBL, Dynaudio, and Klein & Hummel is needed to create solid offerings. Your driver idea (number and sizes) is overblown. I have a pair of JBL 708Ps, 2-way active monitors with wave guide loaded 1 inch compression driver and 8 inch ported woofer that are extremely dynamic, detailed, and imaging champs. My room is roughly 3/4's the size of yours and they fill my entire basement (160 m2). Just the design of a defraction limiting cabinet goes well beyond what most manufacturers, let alone hobbyists can come up with.
Definitely not true. DIY active speaker are super easy. Given all the amazing digital crossover solution such as DEQX. With a little home work and some commitment to learning the basic of speaker building. Putting in the time to learn the software do your measurements and experiment until you get good sounding results. Have fune.Ric
Thanks for the contribution, purchased the first speaker's drivers this days Trying to find people that had contact with the Accuphase amplification and active crossover mentioned earlier, found tons of marvelous experiences about the F-25 and other previous generations Accuphase active crossover, but not too much info about the amp mentioned.If you guys know someone, appreciate if can put me in contact, many thanks, best regards..
Hello!I must say that I have a lot to learn about which crossover specs will work with the drivers of the loudspeakers, I just started to think about the idea, the general concept, and etc..for what I saw in general about the Accuphase crossovers, appears that they are very complete, and the F-25 modular model is the biggest one, I presume the F-25 is the one with the biggest room for frequency division, BUT, technically: I must say that I don't know how to check exactly which will be better and work optimally with the drivers in question Still have a lot to learn, and as this project will be quite long, purchased just the first loudspeaker components, I have plenty of time to learn, and will start with the article that you shared Thanks sir.
The key word is "properly". Almost anyone can throw together drivers and amps, and come up with crossovers. Equating "super easy" DIY efforts with decades of R&D experience, vast resources of in-house manufacturing know how, and state of the art testing facilities of companies like Genelec, Focal, and Adam (just to name a few more examples) is the epitome of proud papa foolishness. Even Bryston's active offerings are quite amateurish in comparison, where they simply plug their amps into existing speakers and add a hard wired crossover.
I get all of that but.......if you start with an excellent kit were the drivers have been properly sourced and matched and the cabinets designed properly (like from Madisound, PartsExpress or our own GR Research) you can get super excellent results. Just go on the speaker building threads here on Audio Circle. BTW I spent some tine with one of our superb diy speaker builders from the DC DIY audio group......if you heard those you would quickly change your opinion. This particular gentleman also judges the diy speaker competition for Parts Express and his speakers where jaw dropping!Ric
Um, this is "The Lab" - it's specifically here for people who are interested in DIY.