Ashly Electronic Amplifier none User Manual

Page 20

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with the frequency spectrum thus divided, it becomes possible to discard some

of the signal being sent to the tweeter, making level-matching with the woofer
a simple matter.

PASSIVE CROSSOVERS AND FULL RA^IGE SYSTEMS

The simplest type of crossover feeds the full-range amplifier output to a
crossover network with two passive filters, a low-pass and a high-pass. The
appropriate filter outputs are then connected to the woofer and tweeter, as

shown in figure 20.

■ To tweeter

To woofer

Figure 20 Passive Crossover

The advantages of the simple passive crossover are that they are simple to
hook up, they accomplish their primary job of speaker protection, and they are
cost-effective

for

low

power

applications.

When

built

by

a

loudspeaker

manufacturer for inclusion in a specific speaker system, the characteristics

of the individual

can be

to

requiremencs or tne system.

However, the list of problems created by the use of passive crossovers is

fairly lengthy, particularly when used in modern high-power PA systems. First

of

all,

they

offer

no

flexibility

to

the

sound

system

operator.

Passive

crossovers have fixed operating parameters; you can't change their crossover
frequency or filter shape. If your speaker system requirements change, you're
stuck.

Other

problems

have

to

do

with

the

components

of

the

passive

filters

themselves,

notably

the

inductors.

Inductors

are

physically

quite

bulky,

the

more so for low frequency and high power applications, making them difficult
and

expensive

to

manufacture.

Electrically,

they

are

non-linear

and

subject

to saturation and ringing, and are very sensitive to external magnetic fields.

Passive crossovers are difficult to design because they are always terminated
by speakers, which present varying loads to the network. As the impedance of

a speaker varies with frequency, so will the behavior of the filter to which

it is connected. This interaction between speaker and crossover is of no help

when you're trying to achieve a certain response from your system.

Using one amplifier for the entire audio spectrum is also found to be less
than

ideal.

For

one

thing,

it

doesn't

adequately

answer

the

problem

of

mismatched

sensitivities

of

the

woofer

and

tweeter.

If

a

horn

loaded

compression driver is much louder than the woofer in a passive system, the
only answer is to "throw away" some of the high frequency signal by use of an

attenuator on the crossover's high frequency output. This is certainly not

19

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