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I have a nice set of Acme Lo-B 1x10 3-way speakers, and they're super smooth and 'even' sounding. Next to very nice home stereo and theater speaker setups they fare ok... and I've played through my housemate's bitchin' home theater system. He sells audio equipment for a living... www.valueaudio.com and my sounds come across well on them also. When I visit recording studios and play, my patches sound similar to my home setup. I've found that virtually *all* my sounds that are balanced for recording purposes using studio monitors sound extremely bright, and honky on the Mackie SRM-450's. I've often thought of getting a pair of harsher, brighter speakers to make a bank of performance sounds that I would use for the Mackies, but screw it... I'll live in my nice little audio universe. Miko Biffle -- "Running scared from all the usual distractions..." C'mon over to MySpace! www.myspace.com/biffozz Now playing 'Rough' www.cdbaby.com/biffoz The Chain Tape Collective! www.ct-collective.com/ ----- Original Message ----- From: "a k butler" <akbutler@tiscali.co.uk> > I heard a lot of the "Mackie" sound during y2k5 (thanks Bill/Rick). > The Mackie sm's have a quality to them which I would call "shouty" which increases as the volume goes up, kind of like someone shouting at you through cupped hands, and I kind of had an impression that the bass notes were emerging somewhat slowly, ( again at higher volume)... but compared to other setups I've heard they're nice. > Whether the JBLs would sound better at the exact same volume I don't >know, but they're very natural sounding at lower/mid volume. I'd guess that the main difference is how the speakers respond to high volume, with the JBLs going a bit soft, and the Mackies getting "punchy". andy butler