Older speakers had adjustments that could be made on them. I discovered this after I looking at how cross-overs functioned and wonder why i was not seeing adjustable cross-overs. Then I happened appond a pair of at-12 speakers for cheap at an estate sale. Do these speakers and others like them have adjustable cross-overs?
Why are newer speakers designs not including such adjustments (I'm guessing it has to do with making them as cheap as possible)?
Why are newer speakers designs not including such adjustments (I'm guessing it has to do with making them as cheap as possible)?
Bingo! Plus fewer parts to need warranting and recently the advent of relatively inexpensive DSP renders the XOs to be just warranty protection, i.e. 'textbook' filters same as prosound switched to in the '70s.
Actually, adjustable are only high and mid level, not crossover frequency.Do these speakers and others like them have adjustable cross-overs?