Hi all,
I've been using a powered mixer for small gigs and leaving the horsepower (and active crossover, amps and everything else in the 3-way system) at home.
I'd like to add a single sub to the system to add just a little grunt to the overall sound. My powered mixer has not only powered speaker outs, but outs in the front that aren't powered. I hooked up an amp and the sub (which has a low pass filter in it) and it sounded good, but my small mains I use with this mixer clip when I feed them too much of anything below about 100hz.
I figured rather than add a crossover and more rack gear (trying to keep this system small) I could add a high pass filter to the small main cabs to keep everything below about 100~150hz out of them so they don't get damaged. If I don't use the sub I can just dump the built in EQ at the bottom, but that makes everything sound pretty thin - that's why I wanted the sub.
The mixer is a SoundTech PMX10SD powered mixer. The sub is an EV iForce single 18 and my mains are DIY cabs with a 15 (EVM-15B 400w drivers) and a small horn. They are crossed over internally between the 15 and horn and are pretty efficient.
When I use them in the larger system I have, these go down to the floor as vocal monitors so they wouldn't need sub freq in them there either. My powered mixer does not have a way to go from the preamp section out of the unit to a crossover and back to the internal amps.
I've gone over my options and considering I do not want to haul more gear than the sub and one amp to add the sub to my system my best option is a sharp cutoff high frequency pass built in the main cabs. Anyone have a high pass filter schematic that I could add to my small main cabs to keep sub freq out of them? I doubt they'd ever see the full 450W, but the closer to that it'll handle the better 'just in case'.
Cheers,
- JJ
I've been using a powered mixer for small gigs and leaving the horsepower (and active crossover, amps and everything else in the 3-way system) at home.
I'd like to add a single sub to the system to add just a little grunt to the overall sound. My powered mixer has not only powered speaker outs, but outs in the front that aren't powered. I hooked up an amp and the sub (which has a low pass filter in it) and it sounded good, but my small mains I use with this mixer clip when I feed them too much of anything below about 100hz.
I figured rather than add a crossover and more rack gear (trying to keep this system small) I could add a high pass filter to the small main cabs to keep everything below about 100~150hz out of them so they don't get damaged. If I don't use the sub I can just dump the built in EQ at the bottom, but that makes everything sound pretty thin - that's why I wanted the sub.
The mixer is a SoundTech PMX10SD powered mixer. The sub is an EV iForce single 18 and my mains are DIY cabs with a 15 (EVM-15B 400w drivers) and a small horn. They are crossed over internally between the 15 and horn and are pretty efficient.
When I use them in the larger system I have, these go down to the floor as vocal monitors so they wouldn't need sub freq in them there either. My powered mixer does not have a way to go from the preamp section out of the unit to a crossover and back to the internal amps.
I've gone over my options and considering I do not want to haul more gear than the sub and one amp to add the sub to my system my best option is a sharp cutoff high frequency pass built in the main cabs. Anyone have a high pass filter schematic that I could add to my small main cabs to keep sub freq out of them? I doubt they'd ever see the full 450W, but the closer to that it'll handle the better 'just in case'.
Cheers,
- JJ
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