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----- Original Message ----- From: "andy butler" <akbutler@tiscali.co.uk> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Tuesday, 4 December, 2007 11:35 AM Subject: Re: Amp/P.A. Recommendation > > > Per Boysen wrote: > >> I ran a search on "JBL Eon" and found this Brittish 500 W active KAM >> IMS15A speakers that are said to beat the JBL. Company site at >> http://www.kam.co.uk/. I found a Swedish dealer is selling the KAMs for >> half the price now, some sort of introduction campaign it seems. USD >467 >> each that would translate. > > depends what you mean by "beat". > The usual considerations are > > Could just mean they are louder. > > (and they make disco stuff, if you ever heard a uk disco that's scary) > > >> I played on a Bose at the Santa Cruz loopfest last year and thought >they >> really sounded good. I played flute and sax that time and especially >> appreciated not having a monitor speaker at my feet. Such spot monitors >> are good when you play with loud rock bands but for live looping you >> really need to listen to the full public output to play what fits in - >> Bose. > > Totally agreed, for Norwich Loopfest I set up the jbls behind the > performers. > ....perfect monitoring. >> >> Andy - why are you wary of separate sub speakers? >> > > It all started with Sub Woofers, a speaker that handled sounds that full > range speakers couldn't reasonably reproduce. That would be in the >20-40Hz > range. With those it didn't matter that they had a separate enclosure. > Those sounded like a lot of fun. > > > Now the "sub" woofers take on the lower frequencies that would otherwise > be handled by the woofer in full range speaker, allowing high volumes of > "hit you in the chest" 50-100Hz frequencies( or higher). These "Sub" > woofers (really they are just woofers) use resonance to boost the >volume, > which makes for a slow uneven bass response. > So the "doesn't matter where you put it" theory no longer applies. I concur. Many systems for the home are being marketed as 'surround systems' even though the satellite speakers don't pump out more than 20W apiece. Ugh, I got my first 100W receiver in the 80s and never went back. And, yes, UK discos are frigntening for their abuse of volume. (Remembering that, back in the 70s, a DJ who had it too loud was usually derided for trying to compensate for something personal that was lacking. Now? It's a world where turning up the BPM during a piece is somehow accepted as a kind of dramatic effect.) </rant>