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On top i'll be using a cary v12 (50watt)with a input sensitivity of 1.3v the bottom speaker will be driven with a mcintosh mc352 (350watt),input sensitivity of 1.9v unbalanced and 3.8v balanced.They will be driven by a mcintosh c2200 preamp which has balanced or unbalanced outputs.Is it best to just run the amps unbalanced,and will the 0.6v be negligible or should I be concerned about this?Also am I going about this the correct way and if not what should I try?
i would strongly recommend bypassing the passive x-over and going with an active x-over, if you want to bi-amp w/two different amps, especially if one is tubes, the other solid state. if you get good results w/the passive x-over, it will be dumb luck.
i would strongly recommend bypassing the passive x-over and going with an active x-over, if you want to bi-amp w/two different amps, especially if one is tubes, the other solid state. if you get good results w/the passive x-over, it will be dumb luck.doug s.
Quote from: doug s. on 8 Nov 2009, 10:11 pmi would strongly recommend bypassing the passive x-over and going with an active x-over, if you want to bi-amp w/two different amps, especially if one is tubes, the other solid state. if you get good results w/the passive x-over, it will be dumb luck.doug s.That sounds a lot easier than it really is.
Quote from: face on 13 Nov 2009, 04:31 amQuote from: doug s. on 8 Nov 2009, 10:11 pmi would strongly recommend bypassing the passive x-over and going with an active x-over, if you want to bi-amp w/two different amps, especially if one is tubes, the other solid state. if you get good results w/the passive x-over, it will be dumb luck.doug s.That sounds a lot easier than it really is.yes, i realize that, depending on the speaker, it may be quite difficult to bypass the passive x-over. doesn't change the fact that it will be dumb luck to get good results passively bi-amping w/two dissimilar amps.doug s.
Quote from: doug s. on 13 Nov 2009, 12:19 pmQuote from: face on 13 Nov 2009, 04:31 amQuote from: doug s. on 8 Nov 2009, 10:11 pmi would strongly recommend bypassing the passive x-over and going with an active x-over, if you want to bi-amp w/two different amps, especially if one is tubes, the other solid state. if you get good results w/the passive x-over, it will be dumb luck.doug s.That sounds a lot easier than it really is.yes, i realize that, depending on the speaker, it may be quite difficult to bypass the passive x-over. doesn't change the fact that it will be dumb luck to get good results passively bi-amping w/two dissimilar amps.doug s.Sorry, I should have been clearer. I know people who have bypassed the original crossover and have gotten odd results, even though they tried to emulate the original points and slopes. And yes, bypassing the stock crossover can be a little work, but that's only grunt work. As far as bi-amping with tubes on top and SS on the bottom before and retaining the OEM crossover, I've also had mixed results. I had a Welborne ST-70 on the tweeter section of my modified Tannoy Saturn S8's and a McIntosh MC-2125 on the woofers. There was one small area of volume where things sounded balanced and sweet. IIRC, too little volume and things were bright, too much and things shifted in the other direction. It was a fun experiment though. Btw, nice Conure(green cheek?).