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The highpass however will still be 'fixed" via the OXO at 280Hz and stock phase and slope.
I remove everything except the high pass filter for the ribbon tweeter. I guess this is the 6.9kHz crossover between the mid panels and the tweeter.
Quote from: John Casler on 9 Dec 2009, 03:47 pmThe highpass however will still be 'fixed" via the OXO at 280Hz and stock phase and slope.hi john,i have been following this thread, and i am confused - if the rm30's x-o is outboard, then if disconnected, the 280 hi-pass is also disconnected, no? only the x-over between midrange and tweeter (~7khz?) should still reside within the speaker?thanks,doug s.
i would get specific instructions from brian about how to completely disconnect the low-mid x-over, while still keeping the mid-hi x-over intact, for proper bi-amping w/an outboard active x-over.doug s.
Doug, good advice.John, I'm not interested in upgrading a passive crossover. If I change at all, it would be to an active crossover between the preamp and power amps. I hope Big B joins this discussion.
I want to resurrect this thread because my big questions are still unanswered. How exactly does the internal crossover need to be bypassed or modified to accommodate electronic biamping (with a Marchand active crossover)? This will take some work and I want to get it right the first time.I think there must be a high pass cap in parallel between the mid panels and the ribbon tweeter that is necessary to protect the ribbon. Is everything else safe to bypass? Is there any crossover part between the 6.5" midwoofers and the 10" that needs attention?Is 300 Hz with a 24db/octave slope advisable? The passive crossover is 6db/octave at 280 hz (I think). Although that slope seems inadequate to protect the mid panels from dangerous low frequencies. If anyone knows any of the answers, please chime in. Thanks!Scott
John,Thanks for your response. The Marchand uses a 24db/octave slope so it should not introduce any phase problems... unless Brian has skillfully used some combination of 6db and 12db crossovers which are combined to maintain phase. If that's the case, I'll drop this idea and stick to what I have. My thought was that an active XO would be superior to the internal passive XO. I love these speakers and only want to get them to their ultimate performance without introducing a digital XO. I've become a bit of a troglodyte with regard to digital.Scott
Hi Scott,And my intention was not to dampen you project, but to offer direction.Recently with the introduction of the RM50 we have expanded our XO offerings:1) Analog Passive Internal XO2) Analog Passive External (OXO)3) Analog ACTIVE External (A-OXO)4) Digital ACTIVE External (D-OXO)and the D-OXO has 3 optional upgrade levels in the works.I am not aware of any other speaker producer that has such a broad level of XO options.
John,If I go with 3) Analog ACTIVE External (A-OXO), there must be some disabling of the internal passive XO required. All my questions would still apply. Brian, are you out there? Scott
Why do you think that the panels need additional protection from "dangerous" low frequencies? The panels are pretty rugged; I haven't heard of many blowing up (John? Brian?)
Brian may have a "protective" device in the tweeter line. (as a precaution) for those who wish to "tri-amp".
If you drive the tweeter directly from your amp be sure to put a big honking capacitor in the red lead just to be safe . Paul