Hi Guys,
Thought I'd jump in and add my 2 cents FWIW.
I have made the transition from large floor standing full range speakers to mini monitors (and it may be permanent this time
).
I think I know where you are coming from. At MAF, Klaus sent me home with a pair of his Epiphany's (his small mini-monitors). If you guys have been keeping up at the site (TNT), I've been doing a speaker shootout that has been mainly mini-monitors. The reference pair that I chose to gauge all others against whas the Dyn 42's. Not a bad speaker at about $700 or so. When I plugged in Klaus' speakers and got them dialed in for the room, my world changed. Granted, they aren't perfect but what they get right outweighs
everything they do wrong. These little speakers image like you wouldn't believe. They absolutely disappear in my room (on the right material of course). I've yet to roll another pair through here that have been able to do that.
In turn, I've turned into an Epiphany junkie. I can't take these out of the system (which makes it damned tough to write about other speakers
I have become a strong believer in the application of minimal crossover electronics.
Me too. Want to take a trip to the poor-house? Go over to the site and look at my big system. It's tri-amped with an active crossover (between the pre and amps).
Dejan is actually the one that started me down the active crossover path (Dejan, one of these days I'll make it over to pay you back proper, you better hide from Laura though

You want to talk about accuracy, transparency, detail and absolute control.
After listening to Klaus' Epiphany's, I've decided to redesign those huge cabinets and break them up into a mini-monitor for the tweets and mids (doing away with the carvers and using a different ribbon) and a pair of separate sub cabinets for my Shiva's.
Over the past few years I've turned into a connoseur of active crossovers (of sort). I've collected and listened to quite a few. I've got the Audio Research EC-3 tubed, the Sony TA-4300, the Pioneer SF-850, one of the really cheap DJ ones (I forget the name), plus several pro-sounds like DOD and DBX. Of all of them, the best sounds I've gotten out of my system are the solid state descrete designs. The Sony is my favorite but it's down right now for a total rebuild (it's almost 30 years old and long over due).
Some of what I'm saying may sound conflicting, because I cannot verify if the crossovers of either the ProAc or Dynaudio is 'minimalist', but I think the fact that there are only two drivers with a crossover point set very high is crucial to producing a clean sound. To me lower crossover points degrade the smoothness of the very important upper midrange lower treble region of the music, and a much smaller cap and inductor is required. When you go to a 3 way driver you must insert another crossover into the mix with the need for even larger inductors and caps. Regardless of their quality, these crossover components will still compromise transparency.
I agree with what you are saying. I'd like to add a point too. When you go with a higher XO point, you are driving your midbass much (more) like a fullrange driver (ie; Lowther, Fostex, etc). In doing so, the XO point is moved from the critical midband vocal range (where you can hear any design mistake) and moves it up the frequency scale. If you can get a midbass driver to sound transparent in the 3k range then you apply the XO, you now have the makings of a killer speaker (generally speaking). You have few(er) worries about XO slopes especially on the tweeters and all you have to worry about is cone break up on the midbass (well not
all, but close).
Thats not to say that only speakers crossed at 3k (or better) work. There are some good designs that will cross smack-dab at 1.5k, right in the heart (essentially) of the vocal range.
Does anyone have any opinions to offer on effects of caps, inductors, and resistors in crossovers and whether cumulatively they can adversely affect sound?
When it comes to crossover caps, my fav's are AuraCaps. They are the least expensive of the boutique caps on the market and they sound fabulous. I (and loads of others) use them in small signal circuits too. When it comes to crossover resistors, Richard at Audience turned me onto this one. Go to Mouser and buy the Ohmite TCH35P series thick power film resistors (there is no minimum orders at Mouser, one at a time is OK). These come in a TO220 case (like a mosfet transistor). They are rated to 35 watts. They come in values starting at 0.1 ohm and go up to 2k2. In singles they cost on average of $5.66 each. In bulk they drop about a buck or so. These need some serious time to burn in as you might think. BUT when they break in, your highs will open up like you never would have imagined.
Best Regards,
Scott