Quote:
Originally posted by Free DJ America@Aug 20 2005, 01:11 PM
My question is, what is the fascination with DJs using electronic crossovers?
If your speakers have built in (passive) crossovers (99% of DJ speakers have these), you are totally screwing up the response curves.
Electronic crossovers are designed to be use with some of the live sound reinforcement touring speakers which have no internal xovers, or with the handful of DJ speakers that employ by-pass.
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Cheers, Todd.
Active crossovers may seem unnecessary when today's active speaker systems are considered. Powered speaker systems have made life in this business much easier.
For us Luddites (hard heads, strong backs & weak minds [img]style_emoticons/<#EMO_DIR#>/biggrin.gif[/img]) who insist on doing it the hard way -- running bi- or tri-amped sound with traditional amps and passive speaker systems, the electronic crossover is a must. Passive crossovers are OK if you have only one amp to work with. But the amp is working overtime to produce the full range of sound from the cabs.
Another consideration is the venue. We've done some rather large shows that were wall-to-wall people. We're hired to thump 'em out of their chairs -- the more thump, the better. A pair of full range cabs driven by a single amp simply won't do in these situations. The DJs in our local networking group know us for our system. They pass the big gigs to us because they know we can handle 'em.
We've done full-range, bi-amp and tri-amp. The active crossover tri-amped system produces the sweetest sound yet.
I hope it helps.