Looking For Advice After Dumb Vandy Purchase


Good evening fellow enthusiasts. Looking for advice after just making a stupid purchasing error. I usually do good research before making any transaction but I fell in love hard and got burned.

Just paid for some used Vandersteen Quatro for a "decent" price but failed to notice the purchase dis not include the crossovers. I live in the boonies so dont have a dealer handy to maybe just make my gear work without the crossovers, and it seems now the cost of new ones are a staggering $1295.00. This was for sure not in my budget as I am needing a couple of other pieces to complete this puzzle. Worse yet...once I take delivery of the Quatros...I wont have a way to even give them the once over sound wise to make sure they sound fine. 

Any advice? I am bummed beyond all get out at this moment. 
troutki50
NO !!!! read the whole thread !!! the Quattro we are talking about were listed TOGETHER with a modified ARC Integrated amp that had the required high pass filter built into the amp. The ad stated this. NOT in font size 60 bold and the seller has apparently helped the buyer. Now for the DIY crowd, go price audioquest Fire interconnect and all the parts and convince us this is a high margin product, it aint !!!!!

back to the DAC shootout, Richard has a Brick , but he is not a fan of digital. I have heard it, in the Wavelength line, I favor the Cosecant. Also be aware the Brick might not do higher resolution...The Codex is a champ at that
Correct Tomic. The seller and I sorted it out. Live and learn.

I am really excited to shoot out the Brick with the Codex. My entire cd collection was ripped to the highest quality FLAC files I could make and on my small "divorce rig" they sound great. So I wm really excited to listen to the streamer onna more revealing rig.


 I looked at the box, the board, the parts mounted, to the board.

The number of hours figuring it out, 40-50 hours, if your real slow....
Time is money.... I'm retired..  

Different way of building a speaker for sure. A  proprietary active crossover...with built in tone control... OK.. Sounds like a good idea
until you need to replace something...  Do people repair the factory OXOs? Or just swap them out if they get the "new puppy chew toy"
treatment?

Just wondering?

Regards
As a point of reference, I did not purchase a set of crossovers with my pair of Quatro CTs. Instead I sent my Ayre AX-7e back to the factory for the necessary filters installed into the integrated amp.