Home 2023 Forums Digital DJ Gear After my first decent pair of powered monitors for home use and in the booth…

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  • #1016455
    Terry_42
    Keymaster

    There is no monitors (aka I guess you want 2 = a pair) for 100 pounds that I would even consider using out on a gig.

    Yes you can get some AV40s to hear yourself at home for that price and they work, but I would not consider them monitors.

    #1016477
    Shaun Pearcey
    Participant

    Oh okay maybe im asking for two different things here.. All i was wanting to know aside from what monitors to get is, can i use one of the monitors through my controller as a monitor on a gig/feedback to hear my mixing??

    Thanks for suggesting AV40’s any others out there I can look at?

    #1016479
    Terry_42
    Keymaster

    No.

    Nearfield monitors that you would want to use at home do something very different from a live PA monitor.

    Nearfield monitors have 2 very important features for home use:

    1. Extremely flat response

    This basically means they deliver the sound that your soundcard puts out as unaltered as it can be, so you cleary hear any fault in mixing and EQing and overall sound quality. This is also why you can use the same monitors (if they are good) for production purposes.

    2. Near Field Projection

    Aka you should sit/stand in a perfect triangle with those 2 speakers, where your ears are level with the top half of the speaker. At this point the sound reproduction will be almost perfect. They are made to project sound exactly in this “corridor”.

    Now of course theoretical you could connect one of those to your booth output at a gig, but it will not really work.

    Why?

    Well first those speakers are not meant to compete with PA level volumes. The volume of the club PA will simply boost the monitor away. Secondly the sound projection will be wrong. You will be not in the right distance and not be standing still. You will want to hear the sound anywhere in the booth area.

    That is what PA monitors do well. Their sound reproduction is not as flat as studio monitors, but they sound OK and they are meant to compete with a PA system (hence their name). Their angle of projection is a lot wider and a lot more air is moved to do it.

     

    So what are my usual suspects for this?

    Well for home use monitors the best bang for the buck are the awesome KRK Rockit 6s. They are great value for money and can hold their own against speakers double the price.

    As for PA monitors I used Yamaha, QSC and HK audio to great success and you can easily use any of them. However do note that most clubs will already have booth monitors, so I actually do not have the need to bring one in 99% of the cases.

    #1016529
    DJ 2-Easy
    Participant

    I use Reloop ADM5’s for my home mixing purposes. I have never used any other monitors so have no sound comparisons, however the reason i chose them was A: Price-£125 B: only one power chord required (speaker cable links them) C: The smaller size helps as they are not set up permanently, they are packed away after each session.

    You have volume/bass/treble knobs on rear, and they are rated at 30watts which is plenty for home mixing purposes (not so sure about booth volume here though) the volume knob has not moved past 3/4 yet.

    Obviously only being 5″ woofers they will not blow you away with bass, but they sound good enough to me.

     

    Sean.

     

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