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The only passive speakers that consistently sound better to my ears than the best active speakers I've ever heard to date, are the Joseph Audio lineup. These use their patented "Infinite Slope" technology, which results in a 240db/octave transition (120db/octave in their latest "XL" series speakers), almost no interaction between the drivers, and an extremely easy load on the amp.The link above describes the implementation fairly thoroughly, with some more tech stuff here.These Joseph Audio speakers are simply the best sounding speakers I've ever heard. I have to believe it's the Infinite Slope crossover tech along with their metal cone drivers.
The truth is passive crossovers do so much more than just rolloff drivers at certain slopes. I'm about to walk out the door, delivering a pair of speaks to my Uncle ... and taking my daughter swimming at his place I'll just throw this out for thought before I go. How can a speaker designer KNOW the end-user is hearing what they're supposed to be hearing unless what's delivered into their hands is a finished product? You advocate asking for a speaker with no crossover, is the builder supposed to also deliver a transfer function, or just hope that the end user will get it close? And if they don't get it close and are unhappy with the speaker, what then ... blame them? That's the reality of why to use passive networks, there's probably <5% of the audiophile community that can take raw drivers, measure and analyze them correctly, and design a network that optimizes their capabilities. Things like driver cone/motor energy storage and break-ups, distortion components, phase response, step response to achieve time alignment, overall impedance, off-axis response and lobing ... to name a few ... are ALL considered and weighed by the designer. There are well-known designers who don't even look at the FR response until they're well into the design process, phase and step are used exclusively in beginning phases of design. And on top of that passive networks not only can address and correct these things, they can do it individually to match the L/R speaker ... and deliver guaranteed quality control. I'll leave arguments over 'quality' to the engineers. I think the burden of proof lies on the line-level guys shoulders. If you're talking simple line-level crossover slopes, they simply don't have enough flexibility ... if you're talking about a full active device like the DEQ, then they all use hundreds more components than any passive, and plenty of potential for degradation.
Hope you don't mind my thoughts on this issue.My concerns pretty much revolve around the musical quality of the electronic crossover. I suspect it could be considered to be basically another line level preamp stage (with or without gain) in series with the main preamp and amplifiers. My thoughts regarding the overall performance of an audio system has always been that the system performs up to the level of the weakest link there. Complex electronic crossovers with all the necessary control functions for adjustable gain, crossover slope, and pole points for each driver almost always use integrated circuit active drivers for the necessary electronic functions. It seems a bit strange to me for someone who loves tube preamps and tube power amps to not hear what a box chock full of ICs is doing to his system musicality, for example.Passive line level crossovers much be driven by the preamplifier ahead of it. This can place an unhappy capacitive load on the preamp line stage unless the preamp is designed to drive significant loads (some are, others are not).A purpose designed electronic crossover with true audiophile active circuits precisely tailored to a specific loudspeaker design might very well indeed provide the best possible results. But I wonder then if the musical benefits of the electronic crossover and two or more power amplifiers will be cost effective in comparison to a good speaker level crossover driven by one excellent full range amplifier.Sometimes the the line level crossover will win, sometimes not, your results may vary.Regards,Frank Van Alstine
Turbo,Thanks for inviting me to air these points in the lab. Let me more carefully state what I am suggesting.I don't expect the user to figure that out. I request that the speaker designer publish the slopes and crossover points. Kudos to those who already do. Left to right matching is usually done by the speaker maker measuring and matching the individual drivers. I assume he would still do that in a speaker sans crossover. If he decides to sell you unmatched drivers (at a good discount) the user can easily achieve matching with separate left and right output pots on the line level crossover. Do you know manufactures who match L/R by fooling with resistors in the crossover? If so they are doing it the hard way. I am constantly amused by those who give their undying respect to designers who create excellent executions of bad ideas.
Quote from: Roger A. Modjeski on 29 Jun 2008, 04:15 pmTurbo,Thanks for inviting me to air these points in the lab. Let me more carefully state what I am suggesting.I don't expect the user to figure that out. I request that the speaker designer publish the slopes and crossover points. Kudos to those who already do. Left to right matching is usually done by the speaker maker measuring and matching the individual drivers. I assume he would still do that in a speaker sans crossover. If he decides to sell you unmatched drivers (at a good discount) the user can easily achieve matching with separate left and right output pots on the line level crossover. Do you know manufactures who match L/R by fooling with resistors in the crossover? If so they are doing it the hard way. I am constantly amused by those who give their undying respect to designers who create excellent executions of bad ideas.Well, I'd submit that most if not all the speaker manufacturers here only ship matched pairs of final speakers ... I know when I build something for a customer I settle on nothing less. There ARE significant differences, even between sequential numbered drivers from high end manufacturers. And I've often seen those differences magnified once the driver is placed on my cabinet baffle. The L/R matching is HUGE in determining the width, depth, and solidy of a soundstage. It's absolutely crucial, and that's why the builders here do it ... because we're not the Polk's of the World, we cater to a discriminating clientel. Now can the same thing be done with an active that takes complex transfer functions, of course it can. But like I said, then we're not talking about simple low-component-count passive line-level filters, we're talking about units like the DEQ that have hundreds of components of questionable quality and a cheap power supply ... how's that a theoretical improvement over passive networks with components that have been highly optimized (like Mundorf, Sonicap, Alpha Core, etc). True you don't need a Zobel with active xovers, but Zobels are about the easiest part of the passive network to implement ... the simulator always nails em, and from there all there is to do is tweak the Q if you want some shaping. My point is that passive networks are the de-facto standard. When I see a post like your original that only points out theoretical advantages of an active network, while glossing over it's disadvantages ... I think to myself "prove it". Personally I'd never put a stock DEQ in my audio chain, and even a modded one I'd be wary of. Passive line-level networks simply can't do what's needed to deal with the vast majority of drivers on the market ... active units aren't built to the standard those here expect, and even if they were they're much more complex. The main advantage I see to an active network and multiple amps is being able to eliminate back-emf, but that's not exactly a major concern.