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Hi Bhobba, ... That said, I would suggest a lot of very smart people have tried to implement a digital filter (if indeed the DEQX is such) and failed. This is a very tricky exercise, where the passive crossovers of conventional speakers are a fully mature technology. A good passive crossover will also incorporate incorporate driver impedance correction. This is very important, and should not be forgotten with active systems ...
Hi AllI am looking at putting together a system around the DEQX digital crossover and am currently looking at a suitable speaker system. It occurred to me that the tweakability of the AKSONIC may be the perfect match for the DEQX. What do others think? Would the kit be available without the crossovers?ThanksBill
Hi Bhobba,Thanks for your post about the AKSonic.I'm committed with the designer for the sale of the AKSonic; it must be sold as a complete kit. Separating the crossovers is sadly not an option.That said, I would suggest a lot of very smart people have tried to implement a digital filter (if indeed the DEQX is such) and failed. This is a very tricky exercise, where the passive crossovers of conventional speakers are a fully mature technology. A good passive crossover will also incorporate dr ...
Passive crossovers are not the wooden cross they are made out to be....
I just want to mention I agree with Hugh on this. Indeed if you wish to use a ribbon tweeter you need to put a capacitor in series with it because they usually short at DC. ...
Hi Andy,... A typical dynamic driver has a highly inductive voice coil, and ... Unless impedance is corrected for the voice coil, the load presented to the amplifier could well cause problems. In cases where it does not cause problems, there is inevitably some disturbance of the phase relationships in the music - and this seriously affects the imaging. Thus, I would argue that Zobel correction, a capacitor and a resistor in series across the voice coil, should be mandatory EVEN ON ACTIVE SYSTEMS!!...
HOWEVER, first ... am I correct in thinking the amount of voice coil inductance varies with frequency - and the cap/res values chosen for the Zobel correction are selected by taking the inductance at one particular frequency? Which means at all other frequencies, they are the wrong values ... so your dynamic driver will be causing problems for the amp or affecting the imaging (due to disturbance of the phase relationships in the music) at all frequencies except the one used for the calculation?
My MGIIIA (true) ribbon has been driven quite happily by my AKSA 25 for several years. What you DO need to be careful of in an all-active setup (partickerly those fragile ribbons!) is that the amp driving the tweeter does not exhibit a power-on "thump" ... which might blow them to bits.
I bow to your superior experience in such matters. My comment was about the ribbons I know; namely the Fountek, Arum Cantus and Raven. Fountek for example carry the following warning: 'Ribbon tweeters show a dead short to your amplifier! You must use a capacitor on them, when testing them or when using them with an electronic crossover!' Considering they have a DC resistance of .02 ohms I would take such a warning very seriously and not risk it - the slightest offset in the amp and bang goes your tweete ...
I hadn't realised that ribbons had such a low DC resistance, though I had wondered a few times as I gazed at that tiny strip of aluminium foil...... A blocking cap is indeed de rigeur.
Please remember the drivers I mentioned contain a transformer driving the ribbons. I suspect that is the reason it is so low - not the properties of the ribbon itself.If I recall correctly Tony's Ambience Ribbons do not have a transformer so the resistance is unlikely to be that low - still I su ...