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Dan Ash wrote: > > I'm another skeptic of in-ear monitors - so I don't speak from > experience here... I would point out that compressors in general, if > improperly used, are prime feedback offenders. Ehm.. I fail to see how you'd have feedback problems with a sealed IEM? Of cause, you may be talking about feedback generated elsewhere, being fed to your IEM.. > I don't care for headphones much either, but they've got to be much more > easily removed in the event of feedback. > > Maybe a 2-stage expander->limiter would provide a predictable level in > an in-ear system. Please explain the use of an expander here? I's have no problems with a 2-stage system comprised of a low-ratio soft-knee limiter plus a hard limiter to cut the really damaging tops really fast. And I can understand Buzap's worries for picked-up interfEARenses *post* a limiter. Makes sense to me, hense, I too would want it as part of my reciever package - *after* the actual reciever. > Dan Ash > White Plains, NY > > Subject: > Re: Canford Headphone Limiter (In Ear Monitoring revisited) > From: > Sam Nilsson <sam@servingpeace.com> > Date: > Sun, 04 May 2008 12:43:54 -0700 > > To: > Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com > > > Buzap Buzap wrote: > >> I was taking a look at in ear monitoring systems. >> One thing that disturbed me: >> Even though most wireless IEM systems have a limiter, most only have >> limiter on the _sender_ but not on the receiver. > > > Hi Buzap, > > I think that the most sensible solution is to have a built-in limiter on > the bodypack. I think that a lot of them actually do have that feature. > > For instance even the most basic Shure wireless bodypack model has a > limiter: > > >http://www.shure.com/ProAudio/Products/PersonalMonitorSystems/us_pro_P2R_content > > > > - Sam > > > . > -- rgds, van Sinn