Behringer Truth
Beezoboy:
All I can tell you is what I hear through an "untrained ear". I have never heard any other near field monitors to compare to. I know that is a no-no but I ordered these through the internet. I live way out in the sticks and there are no major music stores around that carry anything other than basic PA equipment.
When I first heard the Truth's, I thought they were terrible. Every one of my favorite CD's sounded so flat on them when compared to my Surround System. Then I realized, that is how they are supposed to sound. That is the sound I aimed for in my mixes. A flat sound with no particular boost in any of the frequency spectrum. When I accomplished this, it translated to good sounds on my home, car and portable stereo's. I just had to get used to not making the mix sound bassy or brassy on the monitors otherwise it would be mud or tinny sounding on other stereo's.
I think I posted before, the first things that impressed me with the monitors was the weight, 30 lbs. each, the looks, good finish, all parts fit, well machined. I know you can't tell a book by its cover but I feel if they took care on the outside, maybe they took care on the inside. These speakers will pump some sound. They push 150 watts to the 8.75" long throw woofer and 75 watts to the tweeter. I have turned them up to painfull levels without the clip light even flickering (I'm asumminig the clip light works, I just don't want to blow them up trying to see if it does.) There are several swithces on the back of the unit to fine tune for room inadequacies.
Bottom line, for $398 I feel I got a good deal on a very usable product. It beats the heck out of the Peavy SP5's I was using for mixdown.
I went to rec.audio.pro which I was told is notorious for Behringer bashing and was surprised to find about an 85/15 split in favor of the performance/cost ratio of the Truth monitors.
I like them.
Jack