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  1. #1
    Junior Freak
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Location
    New York
    Posts
    316

    Default Monitors + Subwoofer?

    i was liooking around on www.Turnkey.co.uk (thx to a reply to a post from DTD).
    I seen a pair of these for $100 around where i can afford for now but in desperate need of some sorta monitors for due time...



    The Resolv65 monitors sound full and balanced with an uncompromised transparent midrange, leaving room to accurately mix vocals, snare hits and reverb trails. The Resolv65 features 6.5" copolymer butyl surround Woofer, a 1" titanium diaphragm, neodimium magnet with ferro-fluid cooled tweeter and gold plated binding posts all mounted in a ported tuned cabinet.
    Features:

    6.5" copolymer butyl surround woofer
    1" titanium diaphragm, neodimium magnet with ferro-fluid cooled tweeter
    Gold plated binding posts
    Ported tuned cabinet
    Passive crossover
    Now, they also recommended a subwoofer...


    Samson Resolv 120A Active Subwoofer (Each)

    Taking care of the low end is the Resolv120a powered subwoofer. A powerful 120 watt low frequency amplifier drives a heavy-duty 10" transducer, reproducing tones between 40-80 Hz. The unit has a built-in active crossover, a phaseswitch, an auto sleep mode and a convenient mute switch jack allowing the user to easily switch on and off the subwoofer on the fly.
    Features:

    120 watt low frequency amplifier
    Heavy-duty 10" transducer
    40-180 Hz.
    Active crossover
    A phase switch
    An auto sleep mode
    Mute switch jack
    For $100.

    Do i need or should i get a subwoofer for monitors?
    Will it add extra bass to the low end that it shouldnt?
    On my current regular set of speakers i have a subwoofer and i can adjust how much volume and bass on the sub, wich makes you wonder where the volume and bass settings should sit around realisticly.

  2. #2
    BOA Newbie
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
    Location
    Portugal
    Posts
    36

    Default

    Uhm it depends ... U want monitors to djing or to production?
    Hey.. in my opinion (don't have much experience)... if u want monitors to production u need to listen the sound how it is ... I think that a subwoofer change that so I don't recommend u to buy a sub (just in that case)
    Other else if u want monitors do djing than I think that a little bass won't hurt u ;) We like always to feel the bass!
    But just my opinion ... there will be more and best advices in this topic for sure.
    Techno 4 EvER!

  3. #3
    Supreme Freak
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    Calgary, Canada
    Posts
    883

    Default

    i hear this over and over again (that using a sub exagerates the bass and wrecks your mix) and it is complete bunk.

    with the crossover properly set, a sub extends the frequency response of your monitoring chain down to the bottom 2 octaves that many small monitors can't reach. if your stuff is going to be played at the club on 18" woofers, you definitely need to know what's happening in the lower frequencies, or you will get a big surprise.

    set improperly, a sub will double up on the upper bass (with both the monitors and sub pushing the same frequencies), which will cause problems, but setting it up properly isn't really that hard. you can use a frequency analyzer and a microphone, or just use your ear. play a series of notes from a keyboard, and as they go down, the sound should transition from the monitors to the sub smoothly, with no bump or gap in response. if you notice some notes are louder or quieter than others, adjust the crossover down or up until every note sounds at the same volume.
    free marc emery!

  4. #4
    Junior Freak
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Location
    New York
    Posts
    316

    Default

    ^ cool, thx for the advice.

    It's deff for production. Ima try that on my current set up and on my new monitor setup when i get it. I've heard of those freq analyzers, i think for surround sound if i'm correct.
    Cheers!

  5. #5
    M.O.D.
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    The Swan
    Posts
    24,284

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Evil G
    i hear this over and over again (that using a sub exagerates the bass and wrecks your mix) and it is complete bunk.
    i agree, and besides...you should always have a proper set of headphones to double check your mix
    The law is not the private property of lawyers, nor is justice the exclusive province of judges and juries. In the final analysis, true justice is not a matter of courts and law books, but of a commitment in each of us to liberty and mutual respect. - Jimmy Carter

  6. #6
    Junior Freak
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Location
    New York
    Posts
    316

    Default

    I have an ok set of headphones Sony MDR-V600s.
    I try to listen to professional sounds so i can get a feel of the bass in them also.

  7. #7
    BOA Lifetime Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    london
    Posts
    5,290

    Default

    I have mackie 624`s and a mackie sub , works excellent for me, but took a while to set up properly as there are so many options on my sub and my speakers , basically if its set up right its a good thing . However it kinda depends on the size of your monitors , some larger monitoring speakers get right down there anyway sub or not ,however these are expensive. I suspect that the samsons dont get right down there and so a sub would make sense.
    STAR WARS IS ALMOST AS CRAP AS TOLKIEN

  8. #8
    Junior Freak
    Join Date
    Sep 2003
    Location
    sheffield, uk
    Posts
    282

    Default

    i guess if you know what you're doing then subs might be ok but we never got ours set up right - lol - muppets - have got hhb circle 5s now, totally wicked and no need for subs
    suck my tiny brain

 

 

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