studio monitors under 300 a pair under 200 usd would be even better.
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- KVRian
- 804 posts since 18 Apr, 2011
Save up just a bit more and get these: http://www.equatoraudio.com/mobile/Prod ... x?id=37391
Just do it.
Monitors are the last thing you want to skimp on. What good is omnisphere if you can't accurately hear what it's doing?
I kind of agree with most of your points but still IMO monitors are the most important thing in the studio. Though you can never blame a bad mix on monitors, I've seen first hand how many producers create better mixes when they get some decent monitors (and set them up correctly).
I guess like you said monitors can be flat but not detailed.. The same goes for a mix, on crappy monitors you can make it flat but I think it's more difficult to make a detailed mix.
At the end of the day I would just say that anything below 300 is not worth the money, might as well pick up some decent hifi speakers from the pawn shop.
Just do it.
Monitors are the last thing you want to skimp on. What good is omnisphere if you can't accurately hear what it's doing?
I kind of agree with most of your points but still IMO monitors are the most important thing in the studio. Though you can never blame a bad mix on monitors, I've seen first hand how many producers create better mixes when they get some decent monitors (and set them up correctly).
I guess like you said monitors can be flat but not detailed.. The same goes for a mix, on crappy monitors you can make it flat but I think it's more difficult to make a detailed mix.
At the end of the day I would just say that anything below 300 is not worth the money, might as well pick up some decent hifi speakers from the pawn shop.
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- KVRian
- 737 posts since 24 Mar, 2013 from Amsterdam
I second the (new) Tannoys. I have the Tannoy 502's and compared them to the Tannoy 601/Rokit RPG3/ Yamaha HS-5/Alesis MKII/Mackie MR5 MK3 and found them to be to most crisp, yet with a very tight punch.tehlord wrote:They're much underrated. I'm using the 601a's now, although they've been discontinued now I notice in favour of the new 401/501/801 range.
They do have quite an audible 'hiss' (maybe because they're not grounded) but I have them placed about 70 cm away from where I sit and then I don't hear it.
Win8.1 64x/Live 9/Steinberg UR44/Roland HP 235/Edirol PCR-800/Eastman AC222/Washburn D12/Ch. Les Paul/Behringer BCF2000 & BCR2000/Korg Nanopad 2/Focusrite VRM Box/AT 2020/2xB5/E825s/Beyerdynamic DT990 Pro 250/Tannoy 502
- KVRAF
- 8237 posts since 22 Sep, 2008 from Windsor. UK
My 601a's actually hiss a LOT less than the HS80s I had previously. I think it's as much to do with your overall setup as the monitor themselves.
The alternative is a good set of monitoring headphones of course, and I reference my Tannoys with some AKG 701's which are pretty much superior in every possible way to an average untreated monitoring setup.
The alternative is a good set of monitoring headphones of course, and I reference my Tannoys with some AKG 701's which are pretty much superior in every possible way to an average untreated monitoring setup.
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- KVRian
- 737 posts since 24 Mar, 2013 from Amsterdam
Well, they're my first monitors so I can't really compare. However I don't think it's due to setup as it's the same as in the store.
But like I said, it's inaudible from a small distance and surely when there's music coming out of 'em.
But like I said, it's inaudible from a small distance and surely when there's music coming out of 'em.
Win8.1 64x/Live 9/Steinberg UR44/Roland HP 235/Edirol PCR-800/Eastman AC222/Washburn D12/Ch. Les Paul/Behringer BCF2000 & BCR2000/Korg Nanopad 2/Focusrite VRM Box/AT 2020/2xB5/E825s/Beyerdynamic DT990 Pro 250/Tannoy 502
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- KVRian
- 508 posts since 9 Feb, 2012
For your price range, I'd recommend a decent pair of studio headphones, you can get so much more for $200-300 than what you can get with speakers...
I have some Shure SRH840's that I bought years ago, and I still tend to do more work with them than any of the speakers I own:
http://www.zzounds.com/item--SHUSRH840
I have some Shure SRH840's that I bought years ago, and I still tend to do more work with them than any of the speakers I own:
http://www.zzounds.com/item--SHUSRH840
- KVRAF
- 20783 posts since 22 Nov, 2000 from Southern California
These are killer.jeffh wrote:I have some Shure SRH840's that I bought years ago, and I still tend to do more work with them than any of the speakers I own
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AstralExistence AstralExistence https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=265049
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 2276 posts since 19 Sep, 2011
http://www.americanmusical.com/Item--i-SHU-SRH1840-LISTUncle E wrote:These are killer.jeffh wrote:I have some Shure SRH840's that I bought years ago, and I still tend to do more work with them than any of the speakers I own
i could afford these for er sure. that's a very interesting comment. "then any of the speakers i own" what do you actually own that the shures have replaced because that's a very bold statement to say the least. could i really get the same mix quality using very high quality monitoring headphones vs spending much more for studio monitors. i have thought about that before that being, if one buys very high quality studio monitor headphones do you actually get a better value and more bang for your buck since your only buying headphones which are not costly for the manufacturer to make vs the cost of making a pair of studio monitors. that im not sure. and the headphones do cost 500 dollars. but that would solve my payment plan issue since i need to buy left and right studio monitors i can't afford to pay for two payment plans at the same time.
Last edited by AstralExistence on Wed Jun 04, 2014 12:00 am, edited 1 time in total.
- KVRAF
- 20783 posts since 22 Nov, 2000 from Southern California
Open backs are nice, especially when you work on them for long periods. The ones you linked to are a lot more expensive than the SRH840's. If you avoid stereo effects and are judicious with your reverbs, you can get away with mixing 100% on headphones.
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AstralExistence AstralExistence https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=265049
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 2276 posts since 19 Sep, 2011
Uncle E wrote:Open backs are nice, especially when you work on them for long periods. The ones you linked to are a lot more expensive than the SRH840's. If you avoid stereo effects and are judicious with your reverbs, you can get away with mixing 100% on headphones.
uncle e if you had a budget of 190 (to make using the 3 easy payment plan on ams/sweetwater) 160 would be much better what which monitoring headphones would you buy?
http://www.americanmusical.com/Audio-Headphones
or
http://www.sweetwater.com/c453--Headphones
must be 3 easy payment.
or non easy payment plan but less then 190 with shipping in one payment.
- KVRAF
- 20783 posts since 22 Nov, 2000 from Southern California
You can't go wrong with Audio Technica ATH-M50's. Also, we can sell them for *A LOT* less than the $169 AM&S is selling them for and you can use PayPal Bill-Me-Later with us.
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- KVRian
- 508 posts since 9 Feb, 2012
Event TR8 monitorsAstralExistence wrote: what do you actually own that the shures have replaced because that's a very bold statement to say the least.
M-Audio BX5a monitors
KRK Rokit 10S subwoofer
Headphones are great for precision listening and A/Bing because they are very accurate and take the room acoustics out of the equation, and thus I do about 75% of my producing in headphones. I've spent significant amounts of money treating small-ish studio rooms (like 12' x 12' -ish or smaller usually), and still had resonance problems, with headphones it's absolutely a non-issue.
For most of the other 25%, being that I make boomy EDM music, I really need to know what something sounds like in the club. I've not found that any headphones, monitors or monitor-grade subs really reflect what any piece of music sounds like in the club, so I then turn to my PA rig which is a decent QSC amp, and some generic 15" speakers and 18" subs (with a total weight of 300+ lbs, and a hard requirement that I live in a house not too near any neighbors).
YMMV depending on genre...
EDIT: You linked to the SRH1840s, not the SRH840s. I don't have experience with the former, but I think you'd be better off with the $200 SRH840s than any monitor speakers in the $200-300 range. I'm not so sure that $500 headphones make sense for any budget constrained musician.