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  #1  
Old 16th July 2012, 05:14 PM
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acorn acorn is offline
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Default Heybrook HB100

I have a pair of Heybrook HB100 speakers, and I just discovered that the crossover in them consists of one 3.3uF capacitor and a 2.7R resistor , does any one know why so few components were used in these crossovers and would it be worth while upgrading.

I also noticed that they use metal cone tweeters.


Acorn
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  #2  
Old 16th July 2012, 06:59 PM
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Toppsy Toppsy is offline
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Default Re: Heybrook HB100

Though I am not familiar with these speakers I assume they are a 2-way design.

However the components you describe if wired in series would indicate a simple Impedance Equalisation Circuit which is normally wired across the mid-woofer terminals.
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Old 17th July 2012, 08:03 AM
Richard Richard is offline
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Default Re: Heybrook HB100

Hi all,

Yes 2 way I think and Heybrook used minimum xover components as part of the design ideals iirc.

I guess this will be the mid/bass connected directly with a natural hf roll off and the tweeter connected via a series resistor for level matching and the series cap as a first order high pass.
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Old 19th July 2012, 09:08 AM
Richard Richard is offline
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Default Re: Heybrook HB100

Hi again Acorn, this is how I think it will be at present.

Top is if it is single wire connections, bottom is if it is bi-wire, or if you want to try bi-wire.

Changes could be,

trying bi-wire

increase or decrease the R value which will decrease or increase treble level relative to mid/bass

increase or decrease cap value which will lower or raise the high pass frequency for the tweeter

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