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What are you guys using for the low end? One or two subs? How are you crossing over? As mentioned, the disadvantage with a monitor is the bass extension and integration.
What are you guys using for the low end? One or two subs? How are you crossing over? As mentioned, the disadvantage with a monitor is the bass extension and integration.Curt, are you still planning out a monitor and sub for your product line?
My Modwright Swans have Auricaps ($130 for two), special resistors (something like $3-5 each) and Jena labs cryo'ed speaker wire; the four crossover boards have been cryo treated and each driver has a Bybee soldered to it. Also, Dan used Deflex panels for the woofers. The result is a mini monitor that has effective bass to 40-45 Hz (-3 dB) from a 4 3/4" woofer and completely disappears. They are simply stunning.
My goal was to create a near field system that could successfully play any recording of any musical genre regardless of recording quality. I have done it and I am very satisfied with the results.
Personally, I have both. My big system uses a pair of subs (essentially since I'm tri-amped). My little system that I am using for the speaker shootout I am using a single sub. No matter what you my read from the "experts", bass is not omni-directional. A pair of subs is required to pick up all of the ambiance in many, many recordings. Loads of modern recordings are mixing stereo bass (below 100 Hz). IMO, When it comes to subs, I feel they need to be forward firing, not down. A simple test for those of you using down firing subs is to turn yours on it's side then face it towards the listening position. Listen and hear all the detail you have been missing. It completely changes the character of the sub.
We haven't heard much from the big speaker guys It would be interesting to hear why they chose a full ranger vs. a monitor.
Quote from: MaxCastWe haven't heard much from the big speaker guys It would be interesting to hear why they chose a full ranger vs. a monitor.Blah blah blah, blah, blah burp, blah Just my .02 and worth exactly what you paid for it. Mike
Which Swans model is this? I do not recall any mini monitor with a 4 3/4" woofer. The M1 is the closest I can think of with a 5.25" woofer..unless you're using the little multimedia M200 speaker?
This seems counterproductive to me..unless you like to hear average recordings, or you do not want to hear great recordings at their best.
Tell me, what percentage of recordings are great recordings?
Quote from: PsychicanimalTell me, what percentage of recordings are great recordings?Enough where I stay happy
Quote from: Sa-donoQuote from: PsychicanimalTell me, what percentage of recordings are great recordings?Enough where I stay happy And of those great recordings, what percentage of them is good music?
I've been around, dude. Helped pay for college working at a couple audio/video stores. There's a lot of shit music that's extremely well recorded. If my system were recording limited I would be listening to gear, not music. My system has been designed to play *music*. That's why I have nearly 300lbs of power delivery, stabilization & filtration gear--several thousands of dollars' worth ( retail over $8K ). My Modwright Swans are filtered with Bybees and are up there with $5-6K speakers easy...What I have achieved takes a lot of skill--not for the average high end enthusiast by any standard.