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I haven't seen anyone say this.
Any suggested starting points? My random internet googling, etc., only tipped me off to the idea that to realize any significant improvement from bi-amping, I would need to do this, but there is very little I was able to find on how...This isn't something I am likely to rush into, but wouldn't mind doing at some point.I do want to clarify one thing, though. Both amps are identical (Class D audio 254) and are vertical (i.e., one amp board for the left speaker, the other for the right). I was under the impression that this was the "safest" way to do bi-amping in terms of matching gain, phase, etc.
How does (did) this setup compensate for differences in amplifier gain?
Yet people love to use them in active for reasons I don't understand.
I have pics & schematics around somewhere if anyone is interested.
To minimize intermodular distortion?
Usually speakers measure flatter with steeper slopes, but I don't like the way steep slopes sound. In the end that's what matters most IMO, not measurements, but to each her (or his) own.
I have pics & schematics around somewhere if anyone is interested.Yes, please. And if you can recall where to get those pots...
I'm sure I am being too simple-minded, but if the active crossover has the job of sending everything above 150 Hz to the higher-frequency midrange and treble, and everything at or below 150 Hz to the bass, what would the passive crossover do to each of these signals, since they have already been split? In other words, if there is nothing left for them to process, why wouldn't they simply pass the signal, relatively unscathed?
I wondered about the idea of going from (DAC-generated) analog input, back to digital, and then back to analog again, in terms of degrading the sound quality.
Interesting, I have heard many speakers I like that have steeper slopes, but I can never seem to get my setup to sound as good with them.
John R makes a good point. Why compromise the value of your B&Ws only to wring slightly more performance from mass-produced mediocrity?
There's fourth order Butterworth, Linkwitz-Riley, Bessel, Legendre, Gaussien and Linear-Phase (similar to Bessel).