I Was Considering Active, Then I Watched This ...


high-amp
Some ask for direct comparison of active vs passive of the same speaker and I have done this many times.  SCM 40 passive vs SCM 40A active, plus SCM 50 passive vs SCM50 Active.   In both cases using ATC P1 or P2 amps to drive the passive.  So this yields the same exact speaker, same exact model, same exact amp design and same exact output devices in the passive amp vs active amp set up.  Pretty much a direct comparison except the cable being a factor, I used Cardas 6 foot clear light speaker cable and Cardas clear light 6 foot XLR line cable in both.  

I have done this at shows and at home as well as the shop.  I'm the US ATC importer so obviously I have to do this to be informed and accurate in answering people's questions.  I was also the one who provided the passive and active ATC 50s to Neil Gader for his review in Absolute Sound.   

The simplest way to state the comparison is the tone and timbre (frequency response) are the same between active and passive, the difference comes in image and resolution.   The actives image much better and more finely resolve things like reverb tails, harmonic structures of complex instruments like piano and "room sound" - elements of a recording that reside in the background of most recordings.  You can hear placement of instruments more clearly and hear the ultra fine details of the microphone/gear used in the recording process.  For example, in Stevie Ray Vaughns live recording of Tin Pan Alley, you can tell the microphone Stevie uses for his vocals is a dynamic mic, as the bandwidth of the instruments is much wider in bandwidth than his vocal mic.   

Most of the negatives I read in this thread are from people not really understanding the simple difference.  In its most simplistic difference is there is nothing to be improved or gained with a large quantity of copper (wire) and inductors/capacitors (passive crossovers) placed in line between the amp and the driver.  That's it, in a nutshell.  The endless arguments over cable should be evidence of the sonic influence of cable/copper/silver/wire/etc.  This "passive" solution may be the best idea if you like to play around with different sonics, changing amps, cable and all the rest and it IS fun.  But removing all this copper and inductors/capacitors and wire DOES have direct performance benefits.  

The most significant advantage IMHO is the ability to create linear phase of a speaker, by controlling the individual phase of the drivers.  The second advantage is precise level calibration of individual drivers which can vary by 1/4 to 1/2 dB or more from unit to unit (even more variance in machine produced drivers). Passive crossovers do not offer this kind of adjustment.  The third advantage is avoiding the change in sound of drivers/loudspeakers as they heat up (power compression for example).  The values of the combo of driver/passive crossovers begin to change with temperature changes (increases) therefore changing the sound of the overall speaker.    This is most audible after long periods at higher level, such as experienced in a recording studio where a mix session can last 10-12 hours at 85-90dB SPL (or more).  [note: listening at low level for an hour may not reveal this temperature issue so this may not affect every passive speaker the same.  Some drivers have better cooling or venting than others so there is variance in this side affect among loudspeakers based on driver design and length of listening sessions]

With a properly designed active the differences in the front end are far more dramatic than ever before, yielding just as much fun in experimenting with cartridges, tonearms, DACs, etc. So from my experience, active enables even greater insight into the minute details of recordings and all the associated gear. 


Brad
Lone Mountain Audio
TransAudio Group 
ATC USA Pro and Consumer        
Depends on the active speaker. Newer designs are using DSP and have DACs in the speaker I don’t think the digital front end will have any difference. I had a. discussion with a salesman trying to sell me a 16K DAC as to how it would benefit me after the signal passes through the DAC in my speaker? He eventually admitted it wouldn’t.
Sorry musicaddict with my wife and I’s 10th wedding anniversary coupled with the Christmas holidays, I took a brief hiatus from this thread.
Currently I have no speakers, I had Martin Logan Spire's before Covid forced me to sell not just my 2 channel system but also my house. Now I have purchased a smaller house and am looking to rebuild. Would like to purchase a system in the next 6-9 months and was looking at the Buchardt A700’s active speakers as a all-in-one set-up.

lonemountain wow, very informative Brad, thanks.

crouse99 sorry for your troubles with the Mac. The Buchardt A700’s are more of a modular design from what I understand, most components can be replaced with a simple screwdriver in a couple of minutes. Which I could have done that on my old Mac!

Great thread, Happy New Year to all, can’t be any worse than the last one...

djones51: An active speaker can be an all analog design or a digital input/DSP design and Class D amplifiers, but inputs and amps do NOT make it "active".  The critical issue is simply where the processing takes place, at speaker level [passive] or line level [active]. 

A "powered" speaker is not active and this term does not infer active; active speakers are not "powered".   "Powered" is a passive speaker with an amp [usually] inside, placed before the passive crossover just like any other passive speaker.  A "powered speaker", with processing at speaker level, can be Class D or Class A/B amps or digital inputs or analog inputs.  This powered description is used most often improperly, often by users or dealers (or manufacturers) who don't understand the term either or are attempting to deliberately fool a buyer into thinking that powered and active are the same.   They are a completely different designs and concepts.    

If one focuses on "where the processing is", before [active] or after [passive]  the amplifiers, the "active" label become much easier to discern.     

Brad   
Why are you telling me what I already know? I never mentioned "powered speakers" I was talking about active speakers with digital active crossovers. Active speakers can have digital and analog inputs and not necessarily be class d but class AB, G or H. With a properly designed active the front end components are not really much of a concern. If you want to see a properly designed modern active look at the Genelec Ones , ATC is still in the dark ages.