Glad that you are asking. I just switched my crossover from passive to active and was going to start my own thread to report the results
A
passive crossover has the crossover network between the amplifier and the speakers. Because the crossover has to work on an already amplified signal, the components have to handle higher current loads and some amplifier power will be wasted as a result.
An
active crossover has the crossover network between the head unit and the amplifier. This means that the signal is split into tweeter/mid/woofer/subwoofer before the amplifier, so seperate amplifier channels are needed for each. The cost will add up because you have to buy the active crossover unit, then buy enough amps to drive each speaker independently.
Advantages of active crossovers over passive crossovers:
1. No insertion loss. Amplifier power is not wasted by the crossover.
2. Improved damping. Imagine a speaker which has been told to accelerate forward by the amplifier. When the amplifier cuts the signal, the cone will continue to move forward under its own inertia. However it will produce current of its own which the amplifier will "see" (known as back electromotive force or back EMF). In an active system there is no x-over between the amp and the speaker, so the speaker can control cone movement much more precisely.
3. Constant resistive load. Speakers vary in resistance according to the frequency. Passive crossovers are designed for a certain resistive load. When the speaker resistance changes, the response of the crossover changes and falls away from specification. With active crossovers, the only load that is seen is the amplifier - and that is constant.
From my reading I knew that active crossovers are theoretically better so I asked my installer to switch my crossover network from passive to active. In my case, this simply involved removing the passive crossovers and rewiring some cables. System: Pioneer DEX-P9R + DEQ-P9R (has a built-in active crossover), Butler TDB 475, and Dynaudio MW160 + MD130 speakers with a modified Dynaudio X280 crossover.
First things first: I lost power by going active. This is because in passive mode, the Butler amp was bridged giving me 2 x 200W. By going active, I now have 4 x 75W. But this was offset by the lack of the power-wasting X280 crossover.
The X280 crosses over at 2300 Hz with a crossover slope of 12 dB/octave. My installer set me a crossover point of 2500 Hz with a slope of 18 dB/octave. My first impression was that I lost a big chunk of mids - voices became hard and shrill, instruments lost a lot of "body". It is as dramatic as turning a violin from a warm comforting instrument to a hard shrill screaming instrument. However I noticed a dramatic improvement in bass and stereo imaging. The system lost some of its boominess and control of the bass is tightened. I can now hear echos of the drum around the room and I can precisely pick where the percussionist is sitting. Incredible. This might sound a bit boastful, but it this is the BEST imaging I have heard in a car. Anybody's car. It is comparable to my high-end home setup.
The next thing I did when I got home was to reduce the slope from 18 dB/octave to 12 dB/octave. This gave back a large chunk of my missing mids and made singers and instruments sound fuller bodied. The difference was very pleasing but still sounded nowhere as good as my previous passive setup.
I am thinking of moving the crossover point down to 2300 Hz with a 12 dB/octave slope but I am wary of exposing my MD130 tweeter to bass frequencies.
So now I have a slight dilemma. I love the bass and the stereo imaging of my active setup. But I miss the warmth and body of my previous passive setup. My installer points out that I will be getting a sub very soon (which will be run active) but that will only provide bass control and not give me the imaging. In the end I value sound quality over imaging. Voices have to sound like voices. Being able to place the singer in the room is secondary. So I will probably go back to a passive setup.