Im having trouble deciding....I have notice that the dynaudios sound good but they seemed a little bright. the mackie sound a little dull in the conparison to the dynaudios. So its a litte hard to decide....
pr0gr4m Recording Org Pro Audio Group
Joined: Feb 09, 2005
Posts: 1079
Location: South Florida
I have the 824s. Like everything else, some ppl love 'em and some ppl hate 'em. I like them very much...but never compared them to the Dynaudios.
I've read stuff where people who had the Mackies went through a setup process to get they to sound amazing. They have a few controls on them so I'm guessing that it was a combination of getting those setting correct and positioning the monitors properly.
I do a lot of electronic/dance type stuff and I like the low end of the Mackies for that. I'm sure that is due to the passive radiators they have.
I also get a good sound out of them for hard rock/metal.
From what I've read, I think that there are probably more people out there that like the Dynaudios compared to the Mackies. They say things like they seem more accurate. I won't listen to them because I can't afford new monitors and if they are actually better than my Mackies, it would drive me bonkers not being able to buy them.
_________________ I'm a program from a User that knows Alan.
The Mackie's have switches on the back to tailor the frequency response, and I suspect the Dynaudios do too.. spend a bit of time tweaking them to suit the room and your own tastes and then decide.
I'm really happy with my HR626's if that helps at all.
Cucco Moderator
Joined: Mar 8, 2004
Posts: 4213
Location: Fredericksburg, VA
Im having trouble deciding....I have notice that the dynaudios sound good but they seemed a little bright. the mackie sound a little dull in the conparison to the dynaudios. So its a litte hard to decide....
If you're judging their brightness by a store display - ignore this.
They will tame down after properly broken in. A good 4 days of pink noise at around 85 dB @ 1M will do the trick.
I heard a pair recently at the local guitar center and thought: "Wow, they sound like crap in here...bright, no bass, no image..." But then again, they were on a crappy display in the middle of the recording salesfloor.
Get them home/in the studio and you'll hear a totally different monitor.
I can't recommend the Dynaudios enough.
pr0gr4m is right - some people love certain monitors, some people hate them. I haven't encountered anyone who has hated the dynaudios....
I compared them directly on two occasions and like the Dynaudios much better...not saying the Mackies are bad at all, they are good monitors.
In comparison.
The Mackies have a flabby low end and the mids are a bit hollow.
The Dynaudios have a tight, solid low end and a great balance. PLuse, the have a special dimension to their sound that I haven't heard in other speakers in this price range.
Also, the Dynaudios don't seem the least bit fatiguing.
For my purposes, the Dynaudios all the way.
IIRs Recording Org Pro Audio Group
Joined: Oct 10, 2005
Posts: 450
Location: Sheffield, UK
Forgive the possibly naieve question but, are you talking about the BM5a's or the BM5's?
The BM5's are passive, and the 824's are active, so you'd be, to a certain extent, comparing apples and oranges there. Or at least different varieties of apple
Anyway, I have the BM5a's. They kick unbelievable ass. I listened to the new Events, the Mackies, the Yamahas, the KRK's etc. I really, really liked the 824's, until I heard the BM5a's. The 824's sounded like I was listening to a really fine monitor. The BM5a's sound like I'm listening to, well, nothing at all! They're invisible, in a good way. I had a really hard time deciding too, and it wasn't until I found a good deal on the Dynaudio's, that I pulled the trigger.
Your mileage will, of course, vary. And I don't work for Dynaudio.
I have the 824s. Like everything else, some ppl love 'em and some ppl hate 'em. I like them very much...but never compared them to the Dynaudios.
I too own the HR824's and I love them. I do mostly hard rock and metal. I used the Mackie HR824's to replace my old Yamaha NS-10's. I used the NS-10's for 5 years or more. And I would never want to go back to using them again, over the HR824's
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