
RecordingMaster
A Sarcastic Statement
Hi there,
Eventually, I plan on getting some NS-10's or their active brother, the HS series. In the meantime, Here's what I am thinking of having for a "C" speaker set...
I just ordered a Mackie Big Knob and I'm pretty pumped about it. Anyways, there is a way to connect RCA to this thing as one of the sound sources. Will elaborate in a moment.
Here's my current monitoring setup:
1) M-AudioBX5a deluxe monitors (mains), which I plan to upgrade to 8's once I'm in a bigger room
2) Logitech (yes I kow) regular PC speakers with a sub attached to test how it'll sound with a (cheap) sub and on the average Joe's computer speakers
3) AKG Studio Headphones
4) Cheap little Magnavox mono clock radio with aux-in jack to monitor mixes in mono and to see how the mix translates on a low cost, small little speaker with no bass
Here's what I am thinking of adding as a poor man's, temporary NS-10 replacement...
I have a Marantz "Stereophonic" Receiver from the 70's with AM/FM, all the standard eq controls, hi-cut, low-cut, "Loudness" button, 2 phono jacks and 2 aux jacks. It's a great, heavy duty, classic power amp and still works/sounds great. It's about 17" wide so it'll fit in the rack setup nicely if I put it atop of a rack tray/shelf. I was thinking of connecting these speakers I have from 1978...Realistic Minimus 7 (Silver) bookshelf speakers. Check out a review here. I have the earliest production model made in Japan. Minimus 7. Another review here. Since these are know to be "pretty good", "accurate", strong in the mids and highs, bass light, etc. Also, they were originally distributed by Radio Shack. Yes I know. But apparently Radio Shack stuff from those years, like Realistic brand, actually had SOME credibility. They are solid little speakers - you can tell that they put some care into the build quality. Since they are "consumer" mid quality speakers, and due to the things I just mentioned, they seem to possess similar qualities as the NS-10. I know they are NOT NS-10's, but wouldn't the main point be that they are meant for monitoring on bad sounding consumer speakers with not much bass and strong mids to bring out all the problems in your mix?
I wonder if hooking these into my monitoring setup as a "C" speaker set would even be worth the hassle of trying. The Marantz sort of skews my question even more. But I figure I'd keep the eq dials flat and/or adjust them to suit the room.
What do you think?
Eventually, I plan on getting some NS-10's or their active brother, the HS series. In the meantime, Here's what I am thinking of having for a "C" speaker set...
I just ordered a Mackie Big Knob and I'm pretty pumped about it. Anyways, there is a way to connect RCA to this thing as one of the sound sources. Will elaborate in a moment.
Here's my current monitoring setup:
1) M-AudioBX5a deluxe monitors (mains), which I plan to upgrade to 8's once I'm in a bigger room
2) Logitech (yes I kow) regular PC speakers with a sub attached to test how it'll sound with a (cheap) sub and on the average Joe's computer speakers
3) AKG Studio Headphones
4) Cheap little Magnavox mono clock radio with aux-in jack to monitor mixes in mono and to see how the mix translates on a low cost, small little speaker with no bass
Here's what I am thinking of adding as a poor man's, temporary NS-10 replacement...
I have a Marantz "Stereophonic" Receiver from the 70's with AM/FM, all the standard eq controls, hi-cut, low-cut, "Loudness" button, 2 phono jacks and 2 aux jacks. It's a great, heavy duty, classic power amp and still works/sounds great. It's about 17" wide so it'll fit in the rack setup nicely if I put it atop of a rack tray/shelf. I was thinking of connecting these speakers I have from 1978...Realistic Minimus 7 (Silver) bookshelf speakers. Check out a review here. I have the earliest production model made in Japan. Minimus 7. Another review here. Since these are know to be "pretty good", "accurate", strong in the mids and highs, bass light, etc. Also, they were originally distributed by Radio Shack. Yes I know. But apparently Radio Shack stuff from those years, like Realistic brand, actually had SOME credibility. They are solid little speakers - you can tell that they put some care into the build quality. Since they are "consumer" mid quality speakers, and due to the things I just mentioned, they seem to possess similar qualities as the NS-10. I know they are NOT NS-10's, but wouldn't the main point be that they are meant for monitoring on bad sounding consumer speakers with not much bass and strong mids to bring out all the problems in your mix?
I wonder if hooking these into my monitoring setup as a "C" speaker set would even be worth the hassle of trying. The Marantz sort of skews my question even more. But I figure I'd keep the eq dials flat and/or adjust them to suit the room.
What do you think?