DIY biamp 6-24 crossover

what's the best strategy for adjusting the filters?

I recently finished my 6-24 and it was an enjoyable, intermediate level kit building experience. I made a component value mistake that led to an interesting debugging adventure but had no other drama. I worked out a why to use REW to graph the filter response so I can see the results of adjustments, and I'm wondering what are good approaches to adjusting the controls.

I'm starting with the 24 dB option so there are four trimmers per filter. There can be several ways to get the same -6 dB result so I'm wondering if one combination of values would give better results then the others. What's a good strategy for finding the best settings?
 
Personally I like to start with simple 6 dB/oct filters on a new speaker (played gently!)
and graduate in complexity to higher orders.

One of the points of this crossover is the independent adjustment of each pole.

Allows my favorite procedure: Research through wandering around....
 
>Research through wandering around....

I like that. I planed to start my wandering with clues from an existing crossover. I just bought refurbished RP-600ms and I tried bi-amping them with the ACA for the horn tweeters. So far I like where it's going. That led me to the 6-24.

Starting simple is a good suggestion and it's easy to try.
 
to PC997

There are different possibilities to convert an unbalanced signal into a balanced one

active - by the use of OPAmps (like you linked to the ESP-site)

-THAT1646 could be worth a think

passive - with an output transformer?

The PA-people use DI-boxes (active or passive).....?

Only some thoughts....😕 How it sounds????

I only can say that the 6-24XO in single ended sounds great! In my system.

Greets
Dirk
 
Thanks.
I have couple of amps that use balanced inputs only. Preamp has both unbalanced (RCA) and balanced (XLR). So, at least, I need to convert unbalanced output of 6-24 Crossover to balanced. Will something like this work without disrupting the audio quality?

Balanced Line Driver & Receiver

Thanks

Good info, thanks for posting.
I have used the method shown in figure 4.
Nelson suggested about 75 ohm in addition to the output resistor to compensate for the output impedance of the jfet.
 
You can connect a non-balanced signal to a differential input. You can also follow Jensen's idea of adding a balanced output. You will need to use a suitable resistor for "X". It should match the output impedance of the crossover. I think it is about 200 Ohms. Balanced means the impedance of the two paths in the cable are the same.

attachment.php
 

Attachments

  • adding-a-balanced-output.png
    adding-a-balanced-output.png
    53.2 KB · Views: 1,228
You can connect a non-balanced signal to a differential input. You can also follow Jensen's idea of adding a balanced output. You will need to use a suitable resistor for "X". It should match the output impedance of the crossover. I think it is about 200 Ohms. Balanced means the impedance of the two paths in the cable are the same.

Dropbox - adding a balanced output.jpg - Simplify your life

Great information. Thank you very much for the guidance.