Many crossovers have a simple 1st order Butterworth section(an inductor) in series with the woofer Some let the woofer's natural inductance roll off the mids/highs. If there's more than that(a cap to ground after an inductor, balancing or EQ circuit resistors/caps/coils, etc), you will experience some loss/signal degradation. What's the low freq circuit of the x-over look like? A X-over that's designed for bi-amping/bi-wiring separates the entire hi/low-end section, via removing it's jumpers. If you can trace the low freq circuit of your x-over, and clip the positive circuit at the input terminal, you'll not have any further concerns.
Disconnect the woofer
If I was to unhook the wires to the woofer of my (non-biwireable) 3 way speakers, would the crossover parts that make up the low pass to the woofer still be using up energy from my amp, or is there no energy loss since the circuit is not completed?
I am thinknig of active bi-amping the woofers with another amp and letting the mid/tweeter run off my orignial amp.
I am thinknig of active bi-amping the woofers with another amp and letting the mid/tweeter run off my orignial amp.
- ...
- 21 posts total
- 21 posts total

