Please quantify "unusually high". Passive speaker markups are about 4x manufacturing costs. What are the markups on active speakers?
Good question, I know the general markup of subs but let's be honest: there hasn't been a lot of active speakers to gauge. Especially ones that are tested in THD and other necessary perimeters for true comparisons.
An amplifier channel only puts out one electrical signal. There's nothing for it to be out of phase with?
Electrical phase since they are inductive loads is what I was getting at. You have power loss with electrical phase, which is why your statement confused me. Phase shift I would have known what you were talking about.
We are discussing speakers. The worst of phase problems occur when two drivers vibrating at the same frequency are doing so out-of-phase (particularly around 180, 540, etc). It is not possible for this situation to be cause by the amp (well, I suppose an active system with dissimilar amps), and so is caused by the crossover and driver.
I see, but the goal of crossover design is to prevent such a situation. Difficult? Yes. Impossible? Not necessarily.
I'm not trying to be a jerk either, but why do people claim they are not trying to be a jerk right before they say something jerkish?
I said something jerkish now?
I didn't make a snarky comment. I asked a question which, in the process of answering, I expected you to find on your own the point I was driving at.
Actually, I was saying stop taking your misplaced anger from another member out on me. I'm not good picking up tones on the net.
In answering why the industry didn't always use 24db crossovers, you would have had to, to your own satisfaction, describe the problems in such crossovers. The problems in other crossovers can be found the same way. By you answering the question, rather than me telling, you should get an answer that satisfies you.
Not really, the only thing I found was regarding ringing and overshoot. In research 4th orders fixed phase issues, but led to power loss which is what I said in the beginning.
To begin with: it's not apples-to-apples: as you are not accounting for the cost of amplification of the passives.
Yes, but they aren't going to inherently be apples to apples anyway. You have variance in driver construction among other things, arguably which will have a larger impact than going active is what I'm also getting at.
You also fail to take into account that with actives you're most likely going to be dealing with two amplifiers unless you're able to route from one to another ala PC speakers because you must include a PSU in each one.
Lastly: one size fits all. Are manufactures going to offer a 20W model for someone like me that doesn't need excessive power? If they do it will drive up cost as you're back to lack of standardization issues.
I'll have to go look up: I do remember a pair of active 2-way speakers that used dual amps and an active crossover. Heck: My Velodyne ULD-15 uses an active crossover.
Technically using LFE with a receiver can act as a active Xover >_>'
The detail aside: the point is true that there are circumstances where the passive crossover is cheap enough to undercut an active crossover; and where sound quality is a compromise the customer chooses to make.
That's assuming sound quality is compromised. A bookshelf with a fourth order could probably get away with a lot in comparison. Of course, we're looking at higher insertion loss (power) which isn't the best, but manageable.
You were discussing commercial mark-ups; we are therefore discussing commercial speakers.
You were talking about people you'd ask to build a speaker before. Please read the context of what you're quoting again.
I referenced commercial markups on passives to state that commercial markups on actives are not, as you have suggested, far worse.
I'm stating that plate amps have tremendous markup considering the lack of parts. These amps though would most likely cause issues if deployed in a full range speaker - they really aren't meant for it. Especially if deploying switching supplies which is extremely cheap overall. It only gets worse when you add multiple transformers. Then it's the question of does one size fits all: am I paying for more than I need for me?
If you want to discuss DIY we can. Please resist changing topics back and forth to suite your position.
You were the one that posted:
especially without being more expensive than the minimum set by a good active, is not one shared by any of the people here I can think I'd ask to build a speaker.
That's why I asked which you were talking about. You led it there, not me.
Then you are saying something unrelated to what I am saying. It's odd to me how you seem to keep doing so as though disagreeing.
If you'd keep the context it wouldn't be so odd.
So I assume you feel the same about putting amps (and DACs) in pre-amps making receivers, or including power-supplies and tuners in TV screens? When the power-supply goes, you loose the TV too.
Now you're just trying to take the piss for the hell of it. Let me ask you this since you decided to be like that: if you paid an extra $500+ for a TV with an integrated Blu-Ray player, are you going to be irritated if the TV breaks and integrated BR has to be thrown out with it - even though it's perfectly fine?
I'm saying that the amplifier is a significant cost that shouldn't be carried with the speaker. Besides, how does the company decide how much power is necessary at what distance?
20W is fine for me on a passive speaker. A guy trying to fill up his whole living room with high vault ceilings wouldn't be happy. Are companies going to cater to order? If so, wouldn't that raise production cost for lack of standardization?
Amplifiers in the speaker isn't a good idea since power needs are going to vary drastically. Another reason that I went DIY with subs, but let's not head that direction.
But you've changed the subject again. Your original assertion was that there was no advantage other than power consumption. *That* is the assertion I have taken issue with.
No, I said there was no advantage for ME besides power consumption if you go buy how it related to ME. Even though you're talking time domain phase it still really doesn't impact my situation since a pair of bookshelves isn't going to benefit that much. If we're arguing phase shift it can be corrected in a 4th order iirc.
Maybe it would be good if we had a direct cost comparison of straight digital xover vs. passive over and not get the active amplification involved so we could figure out costs of that first?
What you subjectively decide are and are not good compromises are irrelevant to me; as my subjective choices are irrelevant to you.
Considering it started out what was subjectively good for me then what was the point? It started off saying I was willing for the compromises, then you started saying active speakers are cost effective, then keep bouncing between active speaker and active xovers. It's . . . so . . .

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