G
Gohanto
New member
Sorry if you get this question too much, mostly I hang around film production and home theater forums and it's rare to find people who know a lot about sound mixing. (And finding this forum too a while)
Long story short, I'm a student film director, majoring in acoustical engineering (designing speakers). I write, direct, edit, and sound design my own films. I edit sound with a pair of Sony MDR7506 headphones, but now I've gotten to the point where I need a better way to mix.
I've got a ~$6k 7.1 home theater system, but from what I've read I need to invest specifically in monitors designed to show the weaknesses in tracks (although I'm still thinking using my home theater sub would be fine to save some $$). Audio mixing is current done in Adobe Premiere (video editing suite) with just the most basic audio controls. Hoping to upgrade to an Avid/Pro Tools setup in the near future though. And I've got an M-Audio 5.1 sound card in a PC. (Got desktop speakers, but at ~$25 I got what I paid for)
So, I'm currently looking for good monitors for mixing film sound with (good 80Hz and above unless someone has reason to suspect "home theater" subs would have a noticeable different from "monitor" subs). And, if need be, getting a different sound card. My current budget is in the $500 market.
Long story short, I'm a student film director, majoring in acoustical engineering (designing speakers). I write, direct, edit, and sound design my own films. I edit sound with a pair of Sony MDR7506 headphones, but now I've gotten to the point where I need a better way to mix.
I've got a ~$6k 7.1 home theater system, but from what I've read I need to invest specifically in monitors designed to show the weaknesses in tracks (although I'm still thinking using my home theater sub would be fine to save some $$). Audio mixing is current done in Adobe Premiere (video editing suite) with just the most basic audio controls. Hoping to upgrade to an Avid/Pro Tools setup in the near future though. And I've got an M-Audio 5.1 sound card in a PC. (Got desktop speakers, but at ~$25 I got what I paid for)
So, I'm currently looking for good monitors for mixing film sound with (good 80Hz and above unless someone has reason to suspect "home theater" subs would have a noticeable different from "monitor" subs). And, if need be, getting a different sound card. My current budget is in the $500 market.
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), when you are looking for a monitor system, you probably want to find something that has a proven record of producing the desired result, no? Guess what? We live in a time when there has been a big sea change in the world of audio, and an entire way of monitoring has been abandoned, leaving lots of proven monitors unused and looking for homes. I'm speaking of large-format monitors.