Jessel,
It is great joy to learn that another person shares exactly the same idea like myself. Your idea of getting your PC to do digital crossover-over came across my mind in about 2-3 years ago. It sparked an in-depth research, which I have sinced embarked in search of an ideal full-digital audio setup.
To be fair, the processing power of PC and sonic quality of audio cards have since improved significantly. However, at the time of my quest, the main challenge in addition to finding a quality hardware/soundcard that supports multi-channel digital I/O (w/ surround sound support), is to find the appropriate driver and software combination to achieve the goal of "realtime" digital crossover, and still offer Hi-End sonic quality.
The search for a possible solution, based on PC soundcard, did not yield much success. But in the process of discovery, I learn that in addition to achieving the crossover task itself, there are also other challenges which this potential solution must offer, before it can be considered as offering a complete solution. Examples are a wide-range of cross-over slope for selection, the offering of compensation for the phase lags introduced by various crossover (slope) designs, speaker driver calibration and alignment in both the frequency and time domains, room accoustic compensation...etc.
After having done more research, eventually, the solution to the above requirements and challenges all seem to gravitate towards one unique product --- The DEQX PDC 2.6p. A crossover unit, which runs on 2 high-speed SHARC DSPs and offers a software based solution to address all the above challenges like no other product I have experienced in the market. Another selling point with the DEQX unit is that it is the one of the handful of crossover units which operates completely in the digital domain and is targeted towards addressing the needs from both the Recording Studio and Hi-End audio sectors. The only other similar product is the Accuphase DG38+DF35.
You'll be glad to know that with the Digital Output (supporting both RCA SPDIF and XLR AES/EBU) Add-In card installed, the DEQX will support full-digital I/O and function as a crossover unit in the digital domain at upto 96kHz/24-bit.
The best part of the DEQX unit is that it allows you to connect the unit (via USB) to your PC, perform measurements using a calibration mic, compute the software-based filters on your PC for both the driver's frequency and time-domain corrections, then load these setting back to the unit for operation. With the latest release of the v2.2 software that supports 96kHz, you can even opt to get the upgraded version mic --- Earthworks M50, that will support 3-50,000Hz calibration, and create calibration profiles for your sound system that will cater for SACD playback (assuming you have got your super-tweeter setup).
Volume control in the digital domain has always been a concern to me. The result from bit-truncation at low volume setting, which eventually lead to loss in bit-resolution is simply not acceptable to me. So despite the PDC2.6p can double as a digital pre-amp, I have opted for a different solution.
Since my goal is to achieve a full-digital setup, which also caters for my AV needs, the solution again mandates for a (AV) pre-amp that will offer Hi-End sonic quality, yet supports full digital I/O, and MUST offer a digital volume control which does not degrade as volume setting drops. Sad to say that there aren't that many AV-amp that will meet this criteria. However, with persistence, I eventually found the ideal solution from the Goldmund SR-8.
The Goldmund SR-8 is quite a unique piece of audio equipment. In a nutshell, it is a digital pre-amp that also offers a software-based solution to cater for AV needs. It basically shares identical DSP hardware platform with the Goldmund Mimesis 24 and 30, and the only limitation is that it ONLY supports upto 8 digital channel output. The SR-8/Mimesis 24/Mimesis 30 architecture is similar to those of the DEQX 2.6p, and is based on 3 Hi-speed SHARC DSPs, and offers a software-based solution that is capable of evolving to cater for any new and upcoming digital surround standards. All analogue and digital signals are converted into 96kHz/24-bit for processing and output. Once again, you'll be amazed by the SR-8 flexibility to configure its output profile via the PC-based software. Possibility is almost endless. And interestingly enough, you can also update the SR-8 firmware to SR-8F and use the unit as a digital crossover unit. Although it only supports upto -24db/oct, and it is not as versatile as the DEQX when used as a crossover unit, as the PDC2.6p supports -300db/oct.
With this many digital output, the challenge will also be to find enough DACs to decode these many digital audio channels, yet providing the anticipated Hi-End sonic performance at a reasonable price. I am happy to report that the APOGEE DA16x will meet this requirement easily. And to meet my extreme demands on sonic quality, the critical mid-range will be run by the dCS 974 + 955 at a later stage once the "dust settles".
I have been running the Goldmund SR-8, with the DEQX 2.6p and the APOGEE DA16x for a few months now. The sonic performance is like nothing I have experienced, simply breath taking...for once I am experiencing music purity at "ground zero". My JBL Project K2 speakers + UT045 Beryillum super-tweeters have gained new life and found a new purpose to serve (it is amazing to witness how extended they can be driven in an active quad-amp setup).
Of course, with this many equipments all operating in the digital domain, new challenges may be introduced. Occationally, I get a few pops-n-clicks as a results of slight differences in reference clocks. So I am in the process of sourcing the APOGEE BIGBEN to generate a reference clock signal, to be fed into each digital equipment as the Word-Sync input.
Shall let you know more about the result of my conquest soon.
Cheers,
Damian.