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It seems that the behringer dcx2496 is a pretty good piece of kit for the money and has a rather large following in the mod community as well.
Since you asked, I'll give you my $.10 on this one. Don't do it! There are a million reasons why I would advise against this but here are a few to get started. To use the DCX, you will have to completely bypass the passive xovers, make new connectors or at least adapt connectors to each driver and configure the DCX. This last part is no picnic unless you know what you are doing. Also, the connectors for the DCX are balanced and your receiver or power amp is probably RCA. To use the DCX, you will need a dedicated amplifer for each driver. After all of the effort and expense, the end result will probably not sound better than your current passive xovers and will most likely sound worse. Spend the money to improve your system and if you want to try some DIY, upgrade the caps in your xovers and treat the cabinets with No-rez or something similar. These are easy mods that a novice can easily execute. There are lots of opinions on these things on this site and others. Please note, I run system that includes a DCX and I'm very familiar with how it operates. At the moment, it's only used on my woofers and it sounds great, but you can achieve a similar end result without all of the complexity a DEX brings to your system. Plus, I'm not crazy about the DCX with mids and high frequencies. In un-modded form, the DCX does something strange to these frequencies I do not like. There are mods but they are expensive and, IMO, not worth the expense or effort. If you insist on using a DCX, check out the classifieds. There is a guy selling some Emerald Physics speakers with modded DCX and everything you need to get started, for a very low price. AND the crossover is already programmed by people who know what they are doing. Sell your speakers and buy the Emerald's if you insist on a DCX based system. The alternative is to mess around with your stuff, potentially blow your speakers or "mod" them and make them impossible to sell, and wind up with an inferior system after spending lots of time and money. Just my .10!Cheers,J
There was a set in the classified section of Audiocircle. Don't know if they sold but they were very inexpensive. That would be a good first toe in the water of active speakers. Modding your speakers might destroy their resale value and would be a difficult proposition. The DCX is not very user friendly, IMO, and you need lots of wires and amps. You could buy the Emerald speakers in the classifieds for much cheaper if you wanted to give it a shot. The DCX has to be modded to sound good enough for audiophile playback, IMO. Unmodded is good for bass management but you have to know what you are doing. There are other, less expensive, options available you should consider. Here is a link. For $1,200 with original boxes and modded DCX, it's a very good deal. He even has some receivers he is selling that can be used for amps. You could probably swing an awesome deal.http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=98471.0
That would be a good way to start.Prohobo, the 8.3's are 1200 each not per pair aren't they?