Xover Summing Question [message #51110] |
Tue, 15 May 2007 16:47 |
Spinjack
Messages: 100 Registered: May 2009
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So, I'm trying to find circuit diagrams for a passive xover/summing circuit to drive a passive sub. Bsically, I want to run L/R channels off the amp through a xover to a sub and two satellites. I goggled for some circuits but came up short. All I need is basically a first order low pass (satellites are full range) but was having trouble figuring how do that without commoning the L/R channels for the satellites and effectively making everything mono.
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Re: Xover Summing Question [message #51119 is a reply to message #51114] |
Thu, 17 May 2007 06:09 |
Spinjack
Messages: 100 Registered: May 2009
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Unfortunately, dual voice coils is not an option. I'm building a force feedback chair of sorts and am using a bass shaker for the low end vibration. When looking at the application I dicovered it would basically use signals that look very much like audio signals (obviously it would need to be optimised later). So. I'm running any audio signal through a cheap DIY chip-amp and then into the speakers/shaker. But I need to xover and sum the signals to the shaker. The more I thought about it, would it work to build two crossovers and then common the signal line of the load side of each xover (on the low fequency output) to the shaker?
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Re: Xover Summing Question [message #51131 is a reply to message #51121] |
Mon, 21 May 2007 21:05 |
Spinjack
Messages: 100 Registered: May 2009
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That's kinda what I thought, but I was wanting to avoid doing so. I can put in a summing circuit easy enough, but most of the circuits I have looked at combine summing with an active crossover, which increases the complexity quite a bit. What I may try is using a passive xover with a summing circuit either before or after the xover. On a 4 ohm load, what resistor value (if any) would be appropriate to but in series with the capacitor on the low frequency side (second order xover)? I'll be crossing over at about 100Hz, IIRC, so the cap is about 500uf.
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Re: Xover Summing Question [message #51139 is a reply to message #51138] |
Tue, 22 May 2007 14:15 |
Spinjack
Messages: 100 Registered: May 2009
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True, a plate amp would do the trick, but only for the intitial prototype. I'm trying to keep the component costs as low as possible. Also, for the second iteration I will need to use servo drive of some sort for near-DC and impulse signals. The plate amps have to sum the signals and cross them over at some point. A plate amp has a seperate amp for the sub, but can still accept amplified full range signals. The plate amp will need to filter, sum, and amplify. I was simply trying to find a way to remove the amplify piece.
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