speaker-level inputs for active sub

Hello,

The speaker-level inputs to my Cambridge Soundworks Newton P200 (active) subwoofer consist of a 470 ohm resistor across the terminals, followed by other circuitry. I was expecting a simple voltage divider using higher resistances so that 1/4 watt resistors could be used. I'm assuming there is a good reason for the lower impedance to justify the use of the higher-wattage resistors I see on the board. Is there a standard reason why the designers made that choice?

For some background, I'm asking is because the amp inside the subwoofer has died. Instead of trying to fix it I am simply replacing the amp with a cheap tda3116 board (powered by an old laptop supply) and am re-using connectors and such as much as possible to minimize cost. It is this board:
https://www.amazon.com/AOSHIKE-Subwoofer-Amplifier-amplifier-Accessories/dp/B01N5DGK37/
The subwoofer is in a room where we only listen to music at low volumes so I'm guessing even a 20W amp is good enough to replace the 200W that failed. The sub is fed via in-wall speaker-cables from a receiver in the next room - hence the speaker-level input question. The satellite speakers run full-range (they go down to about 80 or 100 Hz) so I don't use the sub to filter the signals to the satellites. If I yank out the 470 Ohm resistors then I can more easily reuse part of the input board to place a simple voltage-divider before the new amplifier. I used such a divider on a breadboard when testing the tda3116 amp in my setup and it seemed to work well with my receiver.

Thanks,

jason
 
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I don't see why you can't use a simple voltage divider, particularly if you've already confirmed it works satisfactorily in your test.

Commercially available speaker to line level adaptors do precisely that (see attachment).
 

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    Speaker to Line Level.jpg
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