Congratulations, to you Terryakhan, on your Pass Labs crossover for your MG-20R's!
I have two questions for you:
1) Are the settings for slopes/gains on the Pass Labs very different compared to the settings you used when you used the Bryston crossover? When I looked into using the Pass Labs instead of the Bryston I was informed that if the settings for slope/gain were going to be the same as what Magnapan recommended, the sonic improvement would be slight and not dramatic.
2) Would you be nice enough to expound more on what you mean by "way more sweeter" then the Bryston crossover in the performance of your MG-20R's in your system.
I know that the Pass Labs crossover offers unlimited and precise options to fine tune any speaker system and is a world class reference piece, very few people have every heard it and very few could afford it, so good for you, to have it in your system. By the way, does it still retail for around $5000.00 to $6000.00?
I have two questions for you:
1) Are the settings for slopes/gains on the Pass Labs very different compared to the settings you used when you used the Bryston crossover? When I looked into using the Pass Labs instead of the Bryston I was informed that if the settings for slope/gain were going to be the same as what Magnapan recommended, the sonic improvement would be slight and not dramatic.
2) Would you be nice enough to expound more on what you mean by "way more sweeter" then the Bryston crossover in the performance of your MG-20R's in your system.
I know that the Pass Labs crossover offers unlimited and precise options to fine tune any speaker system and is a world class reference piece, very few people have every heard it and very few could afford it, so good for you, to have it in your system. By the way, does it still retail for around $5000.00 to $6000.00?