DV Info Net

DV Info Net (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/)
-   All Things Audio (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/all-things-audio/)
-   -   What all speakers are needed for surround monitoring? (https://www.dvinfo.net/forum/all-things-audio/50238-what-all-speakers-needed-surround-monitoring.html)

Laurence Maher August 30th, 2005 03:38 AM

What all speakers are needed for surround monitoring?
 
I've got 2 ps8 event speakers. Nice speakers. What all do I need to complete my speaker quota for surround sound? Please give details. Rather technically inept. How about for 5.1 then 6.1 then 7.1. Thanks.

Jay Gladwell August 30th, 2005 05:14 AM

The M-Audio LX4 2.1 System with the LX4 5.1 Expander System is an excellent place to start.

For "details," try doing a web search. That's the best way to learn.

Jay

Douglas Spotted Eagle August 30th, 2005 08:37 AM

Or, 3 more PS8's, although that's a lot for surround unless you've got a reasonably big room.
Plus you need a sub, which is the .1 in 5.1

Then you need a sound card that can manage a minimum of 6 outputs. I'd definitely not be worrying about 6.1 or 7.1 at this time.

Laurence Maher September 5th, 2005 07:04 PM

Thanks guys, anyone else? Anyone? Buler? Buler?

Jacques Mersereau September 9th, 2005 04:40 PM

Spot is on.

Dave Largent September 10th, 2005 01:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Laurence Maher
I've got 2 ps8 event speakers. Nice speakers. What all do I need to complete my speaker quota for surround sound? Please give details. Rather technically inept. How about for 5.1 then 6.1 then 7.1. Thanks.

Well, I have heard it said that, ideally, you want all your
speakers to be the same model.

Robert Bobson August 27th, 2006 09:45 AM

any recommendations for a 5.1 speaker set that's under $200?

I'm in a small edit suite, and I don't need to blast the sound. If I get a system with hundreds of watts, I'll only be turning the volume up to "3" !

I'd just like a set with good fidelity.

for instance, the Logitech X-530 Computer Speakers $60 (from B&H)
shouldn't 70 watts be plenty?

or what about Logitech Z-5450 Digital wireless 5.1 Speaker System
$225.21 (from amazon.com)

any interference problems using wireless speakers?

Thanks for your help ~

Douglas Spotted Eagle August 27th, 2006 10:39 AM

First off, the lower the volume, the less likely you can get any sort of an accurate mix. And, the lower the level, the more important the quality of the system becomes.
Having said that...a budget system such as the logitech is designed for playback of processed media, it isn't designed for critical monitoring. The lowest cost 5.1 system I've seen is the M-audio LX series, and it's a bit more than 200.00 with 5 enclosures.

While budget and max levels are important considerations, if you're doing work for anyone but your own home theatre, it's also incumbent that you provide the best product you can afford to. Monitors are the most critical component to that endeavor (with regards to audio)

I've never used wireless speaks, so don't know if interference would be a problem or not, maybe someone else can comment.

Robert Bobson August 27th, 2006 11:36 AM

are you saying a Logitech system isn't good for video editing because it boosts certain frequences to make movies and gaming more exciting?

Or are the speakers not clear/responsive enough to hear fine detail ?

My ears aren't what they used to be, so I wonder if I'd even hear the difference? (!)

I've editing projects just using small computer speakers - and they sound fine. Unless the audio is obviouly mis-mixed (background audio drowning out the dialog), I can't imagine that it would matter that much.

And, it's possible to mix on a hi-end system and have it turn out sounding bad on a basic tv sound system.

we used to have a pair of small speakers that we'd run the finished audio through to see how the average listener would hear it.

I don't think most viewers have elaborate sound systems set up with their video.

Thanks for you input ~

Dave Largent August 27th, 2006 11:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Douglas Spotted Eagle
The lowest cost 5.1 system I've seen is the M-audio LX series

I assume you're talking about the LX4 here?
Have you tried it in 5.1? What did you think?

Douglas Spotted Eagle August 27th, 2006 11:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Robert Bobson
are you saying a Logitech system isn't good for video editing because it boosts certain frequences to make movies and gaming more exciting?

Or are the speakers not clear/responsive enough to hear fine detail ?

yes, to all of the above.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Robert Bobson
My ears aren't what they used to be, so I wonder if I'd even hear the difference? (!)~

Does this mean your client can't hear the difference?

Quote:

Originally Posted by Robert Bobson
I've editing projects just using small computer speakers - and they sound fine. Unless the audio is obviouly mis-mixed (background audio drowning out the dialog), I can't imagine that it would matter that much.~

It matters a lot. However, in the previous paragraph you mention your ears aren't what they used to be. No one past the age of 35 has the same ears "they used to have" but that's no reason to not turn out the best product possible. Some people are really thrilled with the sound of their XYZ microphone from China or Indonesia, but even my old ears can sure hear the difference. Have you ever worked on a calibrated, properly placed set of monitors in a reasonably good room? It makes all the difference in the world.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Robert Bobson
And, it's possible to mix on a hi-end system and have it turn out sounding bad on a basic tv sound system.

we used to have a pair of small speakers that we'd run the finished audio through to see how the average listener would hear it.~

Having only one monitoring system for a master is a bad idea. On the same front, do you have a 50$ television you use for color correction vs having an actual calibrated broadcast monitor? It's exactly the same discussion.

Quote:

Originally Posted by Robert Bobson
I don't think most viewers have elaborate sound systems set up with their video.
~

I'd disagree with you on this last. Even if it were so, it wouldn't matter to me. I owe my clients the best, and that's why I have the reputation that I have in this industry. Dedication to the best I can provide. I use the best video monitor I can afford, calibrate it regularly, and do the same with my speaker monitors. Regardless of whether my client is aiming for an older, hearing-aid audience or a zoomin' hip youth audience.

All that said, are you looking for a justification to buy cheap speakers, or truly interested in great sound?

Robert Bobson August 27th, 2006 03:17 PM

If I can get a set of inexpensive speakers that give me 80%, as opposed to expensive speakers that give me 100%, I'll take the eighty.

everybody should want to do the best job they can for their clients, but I can't afford a $50k system right now.

So I'm simply asking if these speaker systems are "junk" or reasonable to work with. There might be a price point under which you just can't get speakers that are ANY good - tinny, bassy, distorted.

I've pretty much decided to get the Logitech wireless rear speaker system, because it fits my budget - and I don't think I or my clients will hear any difference.

Anyone think they're junk???

K. Forman August 27th, 2006 03:24 PM

Robert has some valid points, as do Spot and the rest of the well equipped pros. Just exactly is the bottom of the line? Where do they stop being garbage, and start being affordable? The m-audio setup mentioned above, is about $450-500, depending on where you shop. What is the most affordable setup that doesn't totally suck?

Giroud Francois August 27th, 2006 03:33 PM

probably 5.1 system for computers are ok for you.
Your choice will be driven by the type of input you need. Coax, optical, discreet (one plug per channel) , or PC (usually 3 minijack, front L/R, rear L/R, bass/LFE) and the manual settings you need (usually bass/volume and more).
I got several of them (my preferred is the Z640 from logitech) and all are fine but you need to hear them to choose.
building a system is easy but price will be considerably higher.
the best start would be to get a 5.1 amplifier and then add the speakers of your choice.

Dave Largent August 27th, 2006 04:15 PM

I've seen a couple 5.1 systems at a
well-known big box retailer for $39.

Steve House August 27th, 2006 04:17 PM

The problem with speakers made for entertainment instead of speakers made for monitoring is the entertainment speakers are made to sound pleasing (or in the case of computer speakers, made to sound 'cool' to gamers). But for mastering audio, whether we're talking about music recordings or flim/video soundtracks, you need accuracy. Let's say you have a system that hypes the bass to give that extra ooomph to games. If you mix on that system and are seeking muical balance you'll pull down the base a bit in the equalizer to smooth it out. But that means the resulting mix is going to be weak in the bass when played on a good full-range system. Or let's say you picked up a lot of sibilance when your dialog was recorded or some high frequency noise crept in somehow - you might be able to fix it a bit in post, but only if your monitors are good enough for you to hear it and realize it's there. Or you're cutting a dialog scene made up of long shots and a series of closeups recorded on different days and with different mics, say a boom in the MS and lavs in the CU. Again, you can match the audio qualities to a certain extent to help make them sound like they all recorded at the same time but only if your monitors are good enough and accurate enough for you to actually hear the difference as you work.

If you're just shooting for your own enjoyment it doesn't matter. But if you're shooting for almost any professional purpose, you need to insure the quality your output isn't compromised by trying to work with inferior tools.

My idea is if you can't afford a surround system made up of professional quality monitors all the way around, at least go with a stereo pair of top quality professional monitors for your main mixing tasks and use a secondary surround setup of good quality consumer speakers to check the positioning of the resulting mixes in the surround environment. But actual sound editing and mixing tasks need to be done on a pair of studio quality monitors, there's no two ways about it. I'd definetly NOT try it on any "multimedia" or gamers speakers as they're designed to hype certain sounds and hide problems with others ... for mixing you simply must have speakers that will let a crappy sounding mix sound like crap so you can fix it and willl let a good sounding mix come through. Your mixing environment is a musical instrument and when you're wearing your engineer's hat your a msucian performing on it and you need an instrument that's up to the task. You want to hear the mix, not the system. There are a lot of monitors on the market at various price points - I haven't decided on mine quite yet but I've been doing a lot of shopping and listening over recent months - and my general impression is it's going to be hard to find any active speakers under about $400 per speaker at the very bottom end that are sufficiently accurate to use for professional purposes.

Douglas Spotted Eagle August 27th, 2006 05:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Robert Bobson
If I can get a set of inexpensive speakers that give me 80%, as opposed to expensive speakers that give me 100%, I'll take the eighty.

everybody should want to do the best job they can for their clients, but I can't afford a $50k system right now.

I understand, and to some point agree with you. For my money (even for fun listening) they're junk. For others, they'll be gold. Remember that one man's ceiling is another man's floor.

Plastic speakers can't reproduce anywhere near the spectra of sound that's there, and they're also not "tuned" for professional audio monitoring. Monitors need to be flat. It's like color correcting on a video monitor that is overly red or green. You can't tell what you have.

Where did the figure of $50K come from? For that much these days, you can outfit an entire suite with a high def monitor or projector, sweet Rosetta front end, THX certified surround system, software with which to mix, and have enough left over for a nice cushy client couch. You can get a "serviceable" system for around 800.00, and a kickin' system for around 5k, and an industry top standards system for around 10k. If your room isn't properly tuned, then there is little sense on spending a lot of money on a super high end system.
By way of example, if Logitechs get you "80%" of the way there in your lexicon, I'd say they'll get me 20% of the way there in mine. If you've never heard a good system, then you'll likely be happy with whatever you find at whatever price. Heck, some people are happy mixing on small Bose systems. And *that* is scary.

[edit] Steve House sums it up more succinctly than I do.

Patomakarn Nitanontawat August 27th, 2006 10:45 PM

bose
 
I have a medium sized Bose system. Strictly for listening, not critical mixing. And that's scary!

Dave Largent August 28th, 2006 04:14 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Steve House
There are a lot of monitors on the market at various price points - I haven't decided on mine quite yet but I've been doing a lot of shopping and listening over recent months - and my general impression is it's going to be hard to find any active speakers under about $400 per speaker at the very bottom end that are sufficiently accurate to use for professional purposes.

What speakers have you narrowed it down to, Steve?

Steve House August 28th, 2006 05:26 AM

I can't afford a full surround suite just yet - so going to start off with a base stereo pair only. Most likely candidates are Genelec 8030a (~$1250), DynAudio BM5a (~$900), JBL Pro LSR4326p (~$1000) or JBL Pro LSR4328p (~$1200). I haven't auditioned the JBLs yet but really am attracted to their Room Mode Correction feature that automaticly equalizes them to the room - as proper acoustic treatment is going to be difficult in my present quarters I'm hoping that can help offset some of the room problems. If it turns out I can manage the extra cash when I'm ready to purchase, I might go up to Genelec 8040a, DynAudio BM6a, or ADAM but now we're starting get up there into hefty $$ and any extra money I can free up at the time might be better spent on a sub since I don't anticipate doing a lot of critical music recording and mastering - kinda teetering on the fence as to which route would be better to go. Phase 2 would be a matching sub for the starter speakers and finally surrounds would be phase 3. Until then I'll be using my cheap-a** Dell surround system to check the positioning when I do a surround mix but only after the tracks themselves have been finalized in stereo on the "real" monitors, with a final QC crosscheck on my home theatre system which has a pair of 25 year old biamped ADS L1230 floor-standing midfield monitors as its mains (no longer made - they're ancient but still some of the nicest sounding speakers I know - I understand they were originally designed for the Deutche Gramaphone recording studios - set me back about 1.5 kilobucks way back in 1981) and a David300 15" sub.

Dave Largent August 28th, 2006 06:56 AM

So, I take it you've auditioned the Genelecs and
DynAudios. How do they sound? About the same?

Michael Brady August 28th, 2006 07:07 AM

Quote: I haven't decided on mine quite yet but I've been doing a lot of shopping and listening over recent months - and my general impression is it's going to be hard to find any active speakers under about $400 per speaker at the very bottom end that are sufficiently accurate to use for professional purposes.Quote
__________________________________________

For anyone who does videography or sound for a living then i think Steve has got a pretty good handle on the minimum spend. I would be surprised if any good professional has monitoring speakers that cost less than the above figure.

Douglas has given pretty good advice for any pro out there who wants to take that advice. However there are others ranging from mad keen on videography as a hobby and are willing to spend money on their equipment to others who reckon they can get perfectly good monitoring speakers for $39.00. Now if you are doing your videoing from a cell phone $39.00 speakers would be more than adequate to cover your needs.

It really depends on how far up the ladder you want to go in terms of what you spend and what you get. I am only starting on my filming project (not yet, but at the end of the year) so i don't have any monitoring speakers. But i can give some input that might possibly put things into perspective

I am a home cinema buff i spent three years researching before i bought my system and i looked for value for money. You learn a lot about sound with different speakers and amps and how things change with different set ups etc.

The law of diminshing returns suggested to me that for home cinema speakers anything over $10,000-$12,000 and you start to get a very slight improvement for spending a LOT more.

Take subwoofers as an example. I live in the UK (Scotland) and you could spend anything up to £5,000 for a quality subwoofer speaker. Once i got the speaker system i liked, i tested it with a variety of different priced subwoofers. The cheap makes are just like glorified computer subs, boomy without substance. I settled for a near top of the range REL which cost £1200 (about $2,000) For me there was no significant difference in the even more expensive speakers to justify the extra money, but there definitely was when i sepnt less! You have to be right into listening to appreciate the differences in speakers at varying price points.

Heres an example i well remember. The start of the film Gladiator when the fight begins and they fire those big canon balls of fire out into the distance. You see them land and with a cheap subwoofer you hear a boom and thats it. With my REL subwoofer the boom is different more real AND you feel the canon ball right down at your feet just as you would in real life, a controlled boom at that. If you strive for something really good you will achieve what you want. Many of my friends loved their home cinema system and raved on about it for months. I said nothing but once they came over and heard my system i never heard another word from them. They paid hundreds for their system, i paid a lot more and got value for money without going over the top.

Ironically when it comes to monitoring i am not at all sure what speakers i will get. Most people in UK probably dont have a good home cinema setup. Those that do mostly have ones that either come with their tv or are sold in the large consumer type stores where cheap brands at cheap prices are for sale. But things are improving particularly in this last year or two. Looking to the near future i doubt i could justify the price of a 5.1 system for monitoring. I will probably look at a decent pair of speakers rather than a 5.1 or 7.1 setup. If money is tight i think it would be wiser to spend your money on a pair of speakers than a 5.1 system.

How much to spend might well depend on what you spend right down the line from camera to microphone to mixer recorder to NLE to computer etc.

The guy that has spent $30k to $50 k certainly won't be buying computer gaming speakers to monitor with surely. The other end of the scale might find the computer speakers packages just right for what he has relative to what he spent.

One interesting thing i did notice was that sound tracks on DVD films are inferior to sound tracks you might purchase as a CD. Again take the film Gladiator as example. I liked the music in the film so bought the CD. The difference in sound when played it on my hi fi system was like night and day. Shocked i then played the CD on my home cinema system and it was still much better than the dvd film itself, but not nearly as good sounding as my hi fi stereo system. Was my home cinema system flawed? No i tried it on a £100,000 home cinema system in a specialist shop in Glasgow, much the same difference. The guy in the shop told me that the film tracks on a DVD are compressed so you dont hear everything as it should be heard in a good hi fi set up.

Music and film are made different so you require different types of speakers for film as you might wish for music. Comprimising as always takes place.

Amps can make a significant difference to the sound of your film or music. Most cheap home cinema system amps are terrible for playing CD on. Proper stereo AMPS are better suited for listening to music. DSE covers this slightly in his post by telling you that even if you have poor hearing you can still tell the difference. You can if you know what to listen for or have heard good sound and you then hear poor sound straight after that. I loved the first half of Jay Roses book on sound (the rest became ever so complicated for the stage i am at) but i would say to those who might think that somehow they can skimp on monitors ( and i mean really skimp) then listen to the CD that comes with Jay Roses book. In particular listen to the recordings made by 16bit 12 bit 10 bit and 8bit. Do that on your computer speakers THEN do it on a good pair of hi fi speakers. After that you might just appreciate what Steve said in my Quote at the start of this post.

I hope i have not bored the pants off everyone? i probaly went on much too long. Sorry but its my wee way of returning the good avice i got from you guys on things i knew little about.

Michael

Steve House August 28th, 2006 07:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dave Largent
So, I take it you've auditioned the Genelecs and
DynAudios. How do they sound? About the same?

To my ears they're pretty close - a slight edge to the Genelecs in bass response but both are very detailed and transparent throughout. I really like the Dynaudio BM6a but now we're getting to the >$2000 a pair category and the price makes it iffy. A very close second to them would be the Genelec 8040a or slightly older 1030a for just about the same price. Also ADAM (forget the model number) are very clean and smooth sounding but the price is even higher then the BM6's, >$2500, and just not in the cards any time soon. I also auditioned Mackie's 624 and 824, various KRK's and several others and they just didn't sound right when A/B'ed with the Genelecs and Dynaudios.

My audition technique was to take a number of CD tracks that I particularly like and am familiar with, in a variety of styles - DSE's "Tenaya", "The John Dunbar Theme from Dances With Wolves" the soundtrack to "Moulin Rouge", Kraftwerke "Tour de France" (lots of subtle high-frequency detail), Dire Straits "Money for Nothin'", Diana Krall "The Girl in the Other Room" and "Live in Paris" and Sarah Brightman's "Harem" CD - the last one I heard her perform live in concert on the Harem Tour so it gave an especially good reference point (our seats were right behind and just above and to one side of her sound guy - was great fun looking over his shoulder at the very impressive array of sound gear and computers they were using). Before going to audition I'd pick a couple of those discs and listen again on my main home system just to re-acquaint myself with their sound, then take them to the store and A/B various combos of monitors. Didn't try to do them all at once of course, made several trips with different discs over the course of my research.

Michael Brady August 28th, 2006 09:05 AM

Steve i reckon you are on the right tracks for speakers with good stereo response and all three are good makers of speakers for home cinema use as well. The Dynaudio that i listened to some years ago offered excellent value for money. I suspect they continue to do so.

Some shops here in UK offer older speakers that have been superseded by newer makes. Many of these bargains are not really bargains since the speakers were never really that good in the first place. That said there are genuine bargains to be got if you do your homework. For those who want a cheap pair of speakers that also look really nice the Quad speakers that came out about six years ago were suprisingly musical and detailed. They cost around £200 each then, so you might pick a pair up for £300 or less now.
Though they are not ideal for the lower frequencies (don't go low enough). They are highly laquered and very well finished in black or mahogany and look much more expensive than they are. They are eight ohms so are easily driven by almost any amp which is also a consideration. 4ohm speakers require a pretty powerful amp to drive them.

Years ago many of the big film studios used M & K speakers for monitoring. I tried these for home cinema and to my ears they were no better than other speakers that cost signifciantly less.

I wonder if most people that purchase monitoring speakers concentrate on top to mediem range frequencies and largely ignore the really low frequencies. It would be very difficult (and more expensive) to get a pair of speakers that could go as low as any good sub. So do most guys settle for something that goes down low but not in the 20hz or even 30hz level.

Steve keep us posted on what you finally decide on.


Michael

Dave Largent August 28th, 2006 09:22 AM

What was the main difference you noticed
between the Genelecs/DynaAudios and the
next level down in the KRKs/Mackies?

Douglas Spotted Eagle August 28th, 2006 09:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dave Largent
What was the main difference you noticed
between the Genelecs/DynaAudios and the
next level down in the KRKs/Mackies?

Can't speak for Steve, but IMO the Gennie's have a slightly smoother edge in the harsh ranges, IMO. The KRK's are somewhat similar to older NS10's where we used to put tissue over the high frequency driver/tweet to smooth it out.
We have Hothouse and Mackie systems in our A room, and I really like the smoothness of the 626 with the 180 sub, but it took quite a bit of time to get them properly balanced. The 624's are smoother in the high end than the Gennie's, but the low mid is muddy, and bottom is a tad flappy by comparison.
We have Gennies in our B room, my personal "desktop" monitors are the 624. Wish I had the sub for the Genelec, but it's not necessary.

Steve House August 28th, 2006 09:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dave Largent
What was the main difference you noticed
between the Genelecs/DynaAudios and the
next level down in the KRKs/Mackies?

It's hard to describe precisely - what I look for is natural sounding voices where the individual voice's characteristics come though - Diana Krall, Sarah Brightman, and Charlotte Church all have very different voices and I want to be able to identify them as individuals, not generic "female vocal" and I think it's more of a challenge for speakers to reproduce female voices well than it is for male voices. I look for piano that is rich in overtones and the different parts of the notes - the hammer strike, the primary tone, and the tail-off - are all natural sounding, like a piano was in the room. On complex orchestral pieces I want to hear the various instruments distinctly without the various sections getting lost in each other. I used the Kraftwerke because there are some high pitched winds sounds and the "swish swish swish" of the bicycle's chains on their sprockets underlaying the music and complex male vocals. In "Tenaya" I was listening to the breath sounds in DSE's flute and the tonality of the percussion, again looking for the natural sounds of the instruments. The Mackies were good, just not as good. The KRKs, both their higher priced series and their budget line, sounded very coarse and harsh in comparison, not at all musical and the subtle details I could hear in the others were completely absent.

Dave Largent August 28th, 2006 10:09 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Douglas Spotted Eagle
Can't speak for Steve, but IMO the Gennie's have a slightly smoother edge in the harsh ranges, IMO.


What do you think of the DynAudios?

Douglas Spotted Eagle August 28th, 2006 10:14 AM

I only have heard the DynAudio in a showroom, not in our own place or room I know well. They sounded good where I heard them, with program material that I wasn't intimately familiar with. Since I wasn't shopping for monitors, I can't say I gave them the critical listen that I should/could have.
The same room had the Gennie's set up, and I already knew them since we've had 1029's and now 1030's. I liked the Genelec better, but that could be prejudiced because I already own them.

Robert Bobson September 4th, 2006 05:37 AM

thanks to all for the advice and opinions.

I'm going with the M-Audio LX4 2.1 System - I'll upgrade to 5.1 when I get some more money!

Bob

Dave Largent September 4th, 2006 09:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Robert Bobson
thanks to all for the advice and opinions.

I'm going with the M-Audio LX4 2.1 System - I'll upgrade to 5.1 when I get some more money!

Bob

Robert, I'd be interested in hearing your feedback on
what you think of the LX4's.

Robert Bobson September 8th, 2006 02:12 PM

speaker dampness
 
Life is certainly unpredictable ~

I ordered the M-Audio LX4 2.1 System from B&H Photo, and UPS delivered it yesterday. But they left it outside behind the house without any indication that it was out there, so I didn't find it till today. (Morons)

It rained a bit last night, and the package is damp, including the very inside box that the speakers are packaged in. The booklet inside is damp also - i think just from the dampness of the air in the box.

Do you think this dampness will have a detrimental effect on the speakers???
Causing corrosion to metal parts, or weakness to permeable material?

the speakers were not in direct contact with the damp cardboard - they were in styrofoam spacers.

I called UPS and already it sounds like a complete cluster f*** !

I was told that UPS would pick the speakers up and "evaluated" them, and if they don't find damage, they'll return them to me - at which point I can refuse to accept them. Then I suppose there's some appeal process, etc.

any opinions are appreciated.

edit: I just looked again, and all three speakers are in plastic bags - (although they're not hermetically sealed !)

Dean Digamon September 21st, 2006 03:13 PM

what happnd with that my man?

how do you like the lx4?

Sharyn Ferrick September 21st, 2006 04:01 PM

It is important to not only get the right speakers, but set them up the correct way and have the room set up properly. Mixing standard stereo is one thing, but when you get to 5.1 there are a lot of subtle issues especially on the LFE channel (low frequency effects) that you need to watch out for. Problem is it is a lot more difficult to get a surround mix properly done based on the wide variety of systems the user is likely to have and the position of the speakers.

Here is a link to Dolby that makes for some interesting reading

http://www.dolby.com/assets/pdf/tech...sic_Mixing.pdf

Sharyn

Robert Bobson September 21st, 2006 04:44 PM

The seller agreed to exchange the speakers for me.

But the new ones haven't arrived yet.


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 07:24 PM.

DV Info Net -- Real Names, Real People, Real Info!
1998-2024 The Digital Video Information Network