I finally got the chance to compare my NX Studios to Dannys original units, and also completed my "cheap-o" crossovers to test as well.
Gear:Source: Surface Pro 3
DAC: Grace Designs 02+SDAC
Pre: Tsakiridis Alexander tube preamp
Amp: GR Research GK-10 chip amp.
Subs: GR Research Dual 8" U-frame
Cables: GR B24 & 16-strand DIY speaker cables Electra interconnects.
Stock CrossoverCrossover cost: Roughly $360
Danny's Studio are where this journey started for me.
Easiest way I can describe them is "real" & "tangible." There is lost of detail and clarity to be found at every level, the upper mids and treble are where they really shine, without ever being hard or fatiguing. They present the music for what it is, and it won't lie to you if you feed it compressed or lower quality recordings.
Imaging is razor sharp and its easy to point out instruments within the soundstage. Layering and separation are locked in.
My only "gripe" is that vocals can occasionally sound "gritty" like a photograph with some film grain, and that they are not very forgiving to poor quality recordings..
"Overkill" Crossover:
Crossover cost: Roughly $1100 (may be more/less depending on sales)
Miflex Copper capacitors and bypass caps, Path Audio resistors, foil inductors. These things are loaded with copper.
The best way I can describe these is "fluid." They offer most of the same characteristics of the stock crossover, but they bring a smoother, richer, more relaxed tone, without losing any of the clarity or detail.
Everything just seems to envelope you, and it's really easy to get lost in the music, everything just has a relaxing tone that even "hot" recordings take on a more balanced tone.
Everything feels less "solid" or "tangible" but it tends to take on a more honey-like fluidity. It just pulls you in and keeps you there.
They are also a lot more forgiving with poor-quality recordings, but will definitely reward you with good quality recordings, especially those with lots of spaciousness and depth in the soundstage.
These were everything I wanted from them. I wouldn't recommend going as far as I did, but for me it was well worth the effort.
"Cheap-o" crossover
Crossover cost: ~$55 (could have been <$35 had parts availability been better)
These were the cheapest parts available on Parts-Express in the values I needed. 22 gauge wire, steel banana plugs, sand-caste resistors, electrolytic caps in the woofer circuit.
A fairly typical setup for most production speakers. (Though they're likely paying $10-15 for parts even lower quality parts)
They measure within 1/5db of the "overkill" crossovers, but they cannot compare to the other crossovers
These suck..

Best word I can use is "blurry"...
They have no issues hitting the primary notes, but when it come to anything not front and center, it rapidly looses focus.
In one of my reference tracks, there's a mandolin layered into the soundstage, but on these there's just a vague sound, you almost can't tell it's even there.
Midrange sounds congested & dull.
Bass is sometimes lacking and generally muddy, missing a lot of the texture and tone I know these woofers are capable of.
They make these speakers fall flat on their face and really hold them back.
A fun experiment, but I wouldn't recommend it.
