Yes, Amrita wasn't a very known brand and I find very little discussion about them. Especially my model.
Crossover Redo on my Amrita Audio Floorstanders
Hello all, I have a pair of Amrita Audio Reference Standard speakers. Research shows they were likely built in 1993 or so. I would like to redo the crossovers. The speakers measure 15"x16"x49" and they contain a 13.5" cast frame woofer, 2 Dynaudio 6.5" midranges and a Vifa metal dome tweeter. Is the best way to do this to just buy the exact same value parts (capacitors, resistors and inductors) and just choose the middle of the road choices? I don't want to skimp on the redo but I want to increase the quality of the existing crossovers. I set a budget of $500.00 on the component list. I came in at just slightly under that on the Parts Express website. How would I know if the measured values of the components chosen at the factory in 1993 are the exact numbers that I should use? These speakers are too large to ship to Danny Ritchie so I thought I would throw this question out there for your opinions. I am new to this but I have a friend who is able to solder and assemble everything. Unless there are other recommendations. I'm all ears. Thanks, Dan
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- 13 posts total
Clarity cap CMR’s and Mills resistors or Path can be a nice option maybe start off on tweeter section. There are a lot of nice caps out there. just need to know if you like the Juniper or Vcap sound or what’s in between. Do the best you can with your budget. Sometimes you can find used caps with your values needed, no break in needed most of the time. Those CMR’s took a long time to settle down. I tried Sonic caps there were okay but I would try others.
A good quality copper internal wire is always nice. On one set of speakers I ran external crossover. Not sure it made a difference because never heard upgraded crossover inside the speaker. |
Can you still read the values printed on the crossover parts? Unless you can find a schematic, that's likely your best option. If they're not legible, my educated "guess" is that the measurable crossover values should still be pretty close to original since they're in a passive circuit. If you measure the parts from both speakers you'll double your sampling number....if the parts are very close to each other, I'd think that'd be a pretty good starting point. I'd opt for non-inductive wire wound resistors vs typical sand cast. Air core inductors are preferable to iron core IMO. Try to get the DC resistance of the inductors as close as possible to the originals....a few tenths of an ohm change shouldn't make much difference, but close is good....obviously you want the inductive value to be as close as possible. Good quality caps should help too. Sonicap, Clarity Cap, Mundorf, Solen...there are dozens to choose from, and all have their fans. Caps in particular can take a while to burn in, so be patient. It'd be a good time to replace any ferro fluid if the Vifa tweeters originally had it. Might as well upgrade the connectors to pure copper, and the wire if there's not something good in there already. Dunno if this will help, but I found a discussion of the Amrita Audio speakers at DIYAudio.com https://www.diyaudio.com/community/threads/crossovers-for-amrita-towers.291004/ |
I was going to say that DIYaudio is THE place to go for advice on this kind of question. Lots of builders there. I would NOT do a rebuild without understanding the original state of the speakers. I’m not sure about this brand, but for instance, Infinity had such wonky crossovers and impedance curves that attempting to replicate the original is a bad idea. Some Focals are the same. Assuming the original crossover design is worth keeping, you’ll need a DATS or similar to make sure you compensate for any changes in ESR or DCR of replaced caps and coils. |
I just redid the crossovers in my speakers. I used the exact same values but upgraded all the components and added bypass caps to the mids and highs. I also verified the resistances on the inductors as this can change the performance of the system. My new components were so large that I decided not to shoehorn them all inside and moved my crossovers outside the speakers. I spent over $3000. You can see photos of the completed crossover in my virtual system. The improvement was huge and at the same time subtle. Very refined. Jerry |
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