El,
Thanks. More coherent than I could of posted to Dan's question.
Dan... I went to active biamping for a couple of reasons. The 1.6's are reputed to benefit greatly from better crossover parts. My little Arcam Alpha 10's are 100w/8ohms 170w/4ohms and theoretically a little short of wattage at SPL levels I occasionally listen at. A Bryston 10B came up used at a good price, so lets kill 2 birds with 1 stone. Improve the crossover with the Bryston (bypassing the stock) and get the best I can out of the little Arcams with active biamping.
After the change, it became obvious that I had been straining the amps through the stock crossovers. Clarity and control were immediately present and at much higher SPLs. There is some reading available on the theory. I dont really have a good enough grasp on the basics to completely understand all of the principals. In case you want to read it.
http://sound.westhost.com/biamp-vs-passive.htm
http://www.passlabs.com/products.htm (XVR1 manual)
Now the bad news... all those new and old pop/rock CDs that I used to love so loud... well some of them arent so great when you can actually hear what is going on in the recording.
BTW I made the change to a vertical biamp yesterday. It made a tremendous difference in presentation. Dont know what to make of it yet.
Jim S.
Thanks. More coherent than I could of posted to Dan's question.
Dan... I went to active biamping for a couple of reasons. The 1.6's are reputed to benefit greatly from better crossover parts. My little Arcam Alpha 10's are 100w/8ohms 170w/4ohms and theoretically a little short of wattage at SPL levels I occasionally listen at. A Bryston 10B came up used at a good price, so lets kill 2 birds with 1 stone. Improve the crossover with the Bryston (bypassing the stock) and get the best I can out of the little Arcams with active biamping.
After the change, it became obvious that I had been straining the amps through the stock crossovers. Clarity and control were immediately present and at much higher SPLs. There is some reading available on the theory. I dont really have a good enough grasp on the basics to completely understand all of the principals. In case you want to read it.
http://sound.westhost.com/biamp-vs-passive.htm
http://www.passlabs.com/products.htm (XVR1 manual)
Now the bad news... all those new and old pop/rock CDs that I used to love so loud... well some of them arent so great when you can actually hear what is going on in the recording.
BTW I made the change to a vertical biamp yesterday. It made a tremendous difference in presentation. Dont know what to make of it yet.
Jim S.