ABSTRACT

The Design of Active Crossovers is a unique guide to the design of high-quality circuitry for splitting audio frequencies into separate bands and directing them to different loudspeaker drive units specifically designed for handling their own range of frequencies. Traditionally this has been done by using passive crossover units built into the loudspeaker boxes; this is the simplest solution, but it is also a bundle of compromises. The high cost of passive crossover components, and the power losses in them, means that passive crossovers have to use relatively few parts. This limits how well the crossover can do its basic job.

Active crossovers, sometimes called electronic crossovers, tackle the problem in a much more sophisticated manner. The division of the audio into bands is performed at low signal levels, before the power amplifiers, where it can be done with much greater precision. Very sophisticated filtering and response-shaping networks can be built at comparatively low cost. Time-delay networks that compensate for phyical misalignments in speaker construction can be implemented easily; the equivalent in a passive crossover is impractical because of the large cost and the heavy signal losses. Active crossover technology is also directly applicable to other band-splitting signal-processing devices such as multi-band compressors.

The use of active crossovers is increasing. They are used by almost every sound reinforcement system, by almost every recording studio monitoring set-up, and to a small but growing extent in domestic hifi. There is a growing acceptance in the hifi industry that multi-amplification using active crossovers is the obvious next step (and possibly the last big one) to getting the best possible sound. There is also a large usage of active crossovers in car audio, with the emphasis on routing the bass to enormous low-frequency loudspeakers.

One of the very few drawbacks to using the active crossover approach is that it requires more power amplifiers; these have often been built into the loudspeaker, along with the crossover, and this deprives the customer of the chance to choose their own amplifier, leading to resistance to the whole active crossover philosophy. A comprehensive proposal for solving this problem is an important part of this book.

The design of active crossovers is closely linked with that of the loudspeakers they drive. A chapter gives a concise but complete account of all the loudspeaker design issues that affect the associated active crossover.

This book is packed full of valuable information, with virtually every page revealing nuggets of specialized knowledge never before published. Essential points of theory bearing on practical performance are lucidly and thoroughly explained, with the mathematics kept to an essential minimum. Douglas' background in design for manufacture ensures he keeps a wary eye on the cost of things.

Features:

  • Crossover basics and requirements
  • The many different crossover types and how they work
  • Design almost any kind of active filter with minimal mathematics
  • Make crossover filters with very low noise and distortion
  • Make high-performance time-delay filters that give a constant delay over a wide range of frequency
  • Make a wide variety of audio equaliser stages: shelving, peaking and notch characteristics
  • All about active crossover system design for optimal noise and dynamic range
  • There is a large amount of new material that has never been published before. A few examples: using capacitance multipliers in biquad equalisers, opamp output biasing to reduce distortion, the design of NTMTM notch crossovers, the design of special filters for filler-driver crossovers, the use of mixed capacitors to reduce filter distortion, differentially elevated internal levels to reduce noise, and so on.

Douglas wears his learning lightly, and this book features the engaging prose style familiar from his other books The Audio Power Amplifier Design Handbook, Self on Audio, and the recent Small Signal Audio Design.

chapter 1|1 pages

Crossover Basics

chapter 1|6 pages

2 Why a Crossover Is Necessary

chapter 1|9 pages

6 Loudspeaker Cables

chapter 1|9 pages

8 The Next Step in Hi-Fi

chapter |1 pages

References

chapter 2|4 pages

How Loudspeakers Work

chapter 2|6 pages

4 Transmission Line Loudspeakers

chapter 2|2 pages

7 Modulation Distortion

chapter 3|1 pages

Crossover Requirements

chapter 4|3 pages

Crossover Types

chapter 4|8 pages

5 First-Order Crossovers

chapter 4|17 pages

6 Second-Order Crossovers

chapter 4|16 pages

7.2 Third-Order Linkwitz–Riley Crossover

chapter 4|9 pages

8.5 Fourth-Order Linear-Phase Crossover

chapter 4|11 pages

11 Summary of Crossover Properties

chapter 5|12 pages

Notch Crossovers

chapter 6|7 pages

Subtractive Crossovers

chapter 6|7 pages

2 Subtractive Crossovers with Time Delays

chapter 7|5 pages

Lowpass & Highpass Filter Characteristics

chapter 7|7 pages

11 Filter Characteristics

chapter 7|11 pages

11.3 Bessel Filters

chapter 8|5 pages

Designing Lowpass and Highpass Filters

chapter 8|3 pages

34 Multiple-Feedback Lowpass Filters

chapter 9|5 pages

Bandpass & Notch Filters

chapter 9|5 pages

4.1 The 1-Bandpass Notch Filter

chapter 10|7 pages

Time Domain Filters

chapter 10|33 pages

4 Physical Methods of Delay Compensation

chapter |2 pages

References

chapter 11|3 pages

Equalisation

chapter 11|10 pages

3.1 Drive Unit Equalisation

chapter 11|2 pages

6 HF-Cut and LF-Boost Equaliser

chapter 12|28 pages

Passive Components for Active Crossovers

chapter 13|5 pages

Opamps for Active Crossovers

chapter 13|13 pages

2.5 Opamp Properties: Bias Current

chapter 13|11 pages

9 Common-Mode Distortion in the 5532

chapter 13|14 pages

13 The LM4562 Opamp

chapter |1 pages

References

chapter 14|2 pages

Active Crossover System Design

chapter 14|1 pages

1.6 Control Protection

chapter 14|23 pages

2.3 Switchable Crossover Modes

chapter 14|1 pages

16 Power Amplifier Considerations

chapter |1 pages

References

chapter 15|3 pages

Subwoofer Crossovers

chapter 15|1 pages

2.7 Dipole Subwoofers

chapter 15|3 pages

2.8 Horn-Loaded Subwoofers

chapter 15|11 pages

5.2 Low-Level Inputs (Balanced)

chapter 16|15 pages

Line Inputs and Outputs

chapter 16|30 pages

14 Common-Mode Rejection Ratio: Opamp Gain

chapter |1 pages

References

chapter 17|14 pages

Line Outputs

chapter 18|8 pages

Power Supply Design

chapter 18|4 pages

5 Improving Ripple Performance

chapter 19|3 pages

An Active Crossover Design

chapter 19|27 pages

4 Resistor Selection