What's a good modern opamp for upgrading a crossover?

Hi Guys

I have an Ashly XR1000 crossover that I generally like but would consider an opamp upgrade. It uses LT072s and other dual opamps. What would a be a good modern alternative for unity gain stability and active filters? t
they are all on dual sockets for easy replacement.

Thanks,

Scott
 
Crossover filters are designed around specific impedance levels to match the op-amp topology. Changing from bi-polar to j-fet or visa-versa is likely to degrade THD+N, so stick to the same type when rolling.

I presume you meant TL072, not LT072, which are j-fets; I'd probably use LM4562. If there are some bi-polar op-amps in there a different type would be needed, I'd probably use NE5532. The above two are very widely used in high quality audio gear.

Someone who knows more than me will hopefully jump in if necessary and correct me.
 
Hi guys

I read the posts and re-opened the unit to find the inputs are TL072s and the rest JRC 2043d which looks to be a decent opamps for the purposes. It looks like each opamp has ceramic disk decoupling near by.

I'm using the crossover at 300hz for the AE TD15s to the 18sound 6ND430 and I can dial in a very nice frequency response. I had one channel setup with passive crossover with huge parts and thought the active channel was a bit smoother but somehow was drawn to the passive side I think the td15s was a little louder than the 6nd430 giving mail vocals more depth. IDK. When setup both channels active, sound stage, imaging, detail and dynamics, tone are all excellent by me.

For most of my listening years the playback system had opamps only in the CD player. Whatever they are. I'm not opamp phobic it is easy for me to build those systems.

Am I counting angles dancing on a pin or is there something to be gained with the opamp swap out? It's easy and cheap enough to do.

Thanks again!!
 
OPA1641-1642-1644. Jfet inputs, reasonable bandwidth, low quiescent current, contained cost make them a reasonable swap for tl07x or opax134 but TI improved their common mode distortion quite a bit.

The only problem is that they don't exist in dip package, only soic/vssop.

edit: sorry didn't see plasnu's post. Availability will be a problem for quite a few modern parts :/
 
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I realize that the OP has made his purchase, so hope it works out!

OPA1652 (forgot the relaxed DC offset spec part # that's even less expensive) would also work as a decent replacement for the TL072, as it's still very high input impedance (MOSFET vs JFET).

That said all the caveats about decoupling these much higher GBW parts stands. You will want to double check that they're not oscillating, as sometimes a layout or topology can tip your stability.

The BJT input gives you a few options. I honestly doubt you'll hear much, unless you have an oscillating circuit (component age changing filter/etc) and get rid of it, or vice versa.
 
There's a sleeper opamp out there you need to try. It has laser trimmed offset, jfet inputs and bipolar outputs. I had a project that was eating expensive op amps left and right, primarily the TI Excalibur series. I found this cheap alternative and liked it better! LF411.