lernith
Well-known member
Hello!
I am building a stereo monitor power amp with an active crossover for a single sub. The monitors are Tannoy PBM 6.5 IIs ((±3dB) 55Hz - 20kHz (-10 dB @ 40Hz)). I have not yet selected a sub.
I'm mixing in a Mac with a MBox. The room is about 18' x 12' x 8'. TMI?
Most of the information I've found on crossover use seems like hifi foolery, please set me straight when something silly creeps in. One practice in particular is worrying me: setting things up, then sweeping the crossover point around to find the best point for the room.
I was planning on a 24dB/Octave Linkwitz-Riley crossover because it is phase coherent and has no peaks or dips. The aggressive curve is supposed to lower the workload for the monitors, but it is not a sweepable design. I thought at worst I could have a handful of crossover freqs built into several banks of filters, to be selected and bypassed as needed. Each point would need five op amps and 20 caps/resistors, so it'd be do-able, but I'd feel pretty silly investing time, money, space, and power for a complicated crossover when 95% of rooms are happy at a 80Hz crossover point.
The thought turning over and over in my mind: 100Hz is supposed to be the approximate point of directionality, and I'd want to give the Tannoy's 55Hz rating some berth. So could steps between 65Hz and 100Hz really be that big of a deal?
Usually one can trust GroupDIY to cut to the heart of things so here I am. Thanks!
I am building a stereo monitor power amp with an active crossover for a single sub. The monitors are Tannoy PBM 6.5 IIs ((±3dB) 55Hz - 20kHz (-10 dB @ 40Hz)). I have not yet selected a sub.
I'm mixing in a Mac with a MBox. The room is about 18' x 12' x 8'. TMI?
Most of the information I've found on crossover use seems like hifi foolery, please set me straight when something silly creeps in. One practice in particular is worrying me: setting things up, then sweeping the crossover point around to find the best point for the room.
I was planning on a 24dB/Octave Linkwitz-Riley crossover because it is phase coherent and has no peaks or dips. The aggressive curve is supposed to lower the workload for the monitors, but it is not a sweepable design. I thought at worst I could have a handful of crossover freqs built into several banks of filters, to be selected and bypassed as needed. Each point would need five op amps and 20 caps/resistors, so it'd be do-able, but I'd feel pretty silly investing time, money, space, and power for a complicated crossover when 95% of rooms are happy at a 80Hz crossover point.
The thought turning over and over in my mind: 100Hz is supposed to be the approximate point of directionality, and I'd want to give the Tannoy's 55Hz rating some berth. So could steps between 65Hz and 100Hz really be that big of a deal?
Usually one can trust GroupDIY to cut to the heart of things so here I am. Thanks!