Home Speaker Asylum

General speaker questions for audio and home theater.

RE: The Sound Lab ESL are 'full range' yet they use a crossover.

Wow, I'd love to hear those!

Crossovers are not "all things evil" per se. Large coils on low-pass filters have insertion loss and cost a lot - lots of copper in the windings. Some folks prefer to minimize caps in the tweeter signal path (shunt caps a lesser evil than series ones, according to most).

Impedance bump and rise compensation and equalization for flatter response are usually good things. A 2-way 90db SPL speaker with 90db SPL tweeter is a red flag - no baffle step compensation there, which can make a 2-way design sound very lean especially if it's out in the room where stand-mounts image best. (85/86db speakers are commonly the result of equalization and baffle step compensation...)

Some might abhor the use of transformers, but, they'd then need to abhor the output stage of a single ended tube amp!

In any case, I will definitely be looking into those specific speakers if only to better understand how they work. :-)

Cheers,
Presto



Edits: 12/11/24 12/11/24

This post is made possible by the generous support of people like you and our sponsors:
  Signature Sound   [ Signature Sound Lounge ]


Follow Ups Full Thread
Follow Ups
  • RE: The Sound Lab ESL are 'full range' yet they use a crossover. - Presto 11:24:59 12/11/24 (0)

FAQ

Post a Message!

Forgot Password?
Moniker (Username):
Password (Optional):
  Remember my Moniker & Password  (What's this?)    Eat Me
E-Mail (Optional):
Subject:
Message:   (Posts are subject to Content Rules)
Optional Link URL:
Optional Link Title:
Optional Image URL:
Upload Image:
E-mail Replies:  Automagically notify you when someone responds.