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I have a fairly well put together studio with a couple of pairs of small monitors, but occasionally I like to crank up a song. (to impress myself as well as clients and friends) What do you use or suggest for large monitors. I haven't put much thought into a budget, mainly because I'm not sure of pricing on bigger monitors.

All replies are appreciated.
Thanks, Tony

Comments

hueseph Sat, 08/28/2010 - 12:05

How big are we talking here? This can get quiet expensive. A pair of [="http://www.guitarcenter.com/Genelec-1032A-Bi-Amplified-Monitoring-System-101546406-i1442209.gc?source=4WFRWXX&CAWELAID=589357379"]Genelec 1032[/]="http://www.guitarce…"]Genelec 1032[/]'s would be about $5000us and those are only 10" woofers. Plenty loud enough to damage some ears though.

Oh. You didn't mention powered or passive.

(edit: ok, let's try that again.) [[url=http://="http://www.dv247.co…"]JBL LSR6332L[/]="http://www.dv247.co…"]JBL LSR6332L[/]

Random_Assembly Fri, 10/08/2010 - 05:54

No, I haven't found anything yet, but thanks for asking. I'm still in the early re-design phase, so I have time to figure it out. I even thought about hand picking the componants and building my own. I do all of my mixing on nearfields, so the big monitors are more of a "hey, listen to this" sort of deal. I'm not sure what I'm going to do, but if I build a pair(and if they sound halfway decent), I'll post the parts and pieces and build specs.

natural Fri, 10/08/2010 - 12:33

Here's at least one alternate solution. Add a subwoofer to your near fields.
I use a pair of KRK 7000's (7" woofer) powered with a 150 watt amp for normal mixing. For that loud gratification or to check the sub bass content, I have a powered sub on a footswitch. One tap and I can crank up the volume even just a little and get a good amount of bass in the room, another tap, and I'm back to just the KRK's.
Now, a subwoofer can be problematic, (but I guess bigger monitors have their own set of problems too) but properly matched to your nearfields, a sub can help add that larger dimension you're looking for.

Davedog Fri, 10/08/2010 - 17:03

If all you want them for is playback as mains in your room then theres no reason in the world not to find a good set of JBL 4311 or 4412's. 4425's if you want will work also. A great amp will be needed but you wont need a bunch of watts as these are real efficient and they will blow yer hair back at 100watts! They kind of slew the sound so it sounds good in larger spaces and will help you identify things that are phasing that you might not catch of nearfields. I mixed on 4311's for a lot of years and then Urie's. Miss the JBL's. Build em into a soffitt....they're perfect for that!!! And they WILL sound huge to any client. A great conditioned pair, probably a recent foam replacement and a recone will set you back less than a grand for a pair. Classic sounds have never gone outta style.

RemyRAD Thu, 11/25/2010 - 13:52

Dave you certainly beat me to the punch. I was going to suggest the same thing. You do have to watch out that the urethane woofer suspension isn't rotted on those 4400 series. Don't have to worry about that with 4310/11/12's. Try to find a Crown DC 300A to plug into those JBL's. I have five pairs of 4310/4311/4312's, in the control room, in the den, and my partners living room, in the dining room, basement control room & a couple of Crowns, Pioneer, Hafler, Nikko, lovem'. And maybe one day I'll finally purchase a Bryston? Most of which I purchased used. Only one pair I purchased new and they are workhorses, pretty hard to blow out or damage. They are extremely efficient compared to other monitors and can really be powered quite nicely from a 75 W per channel amplifier.

JBL/KRK lover
Mx. Remy Ann David

anonymous Thu, 12/30/2010 - 20:30

I have a fairly well put together studio with a couple of pairs of small monitors, but occasionally I like to crank up a song. (to impress myself as well as clients and friends) What do you use or suggest for large monitors. I haven't put much thought into a budge. So it will be done and it will be really amazing and outstanding.

ogikubocity Thu, 01/06/2011 - 17:30

All the monitors mentioned above are great...but their just too expensive for home recording!! I've been recording mixes and tracks for a year now and decided to upgrade my BX8a to Yamaha HS80m. Well satisfied with the HS80m and planning on keeping them for a while. In terms of loudness, they might fall a bit short of 10" woofers( has 8"), but it delivers one of the cleanest & honest sounds for a $300 studio monitor. Worth checking out forsure.
I read the reviews on here[[url=http://[/URL]="http://poweredmonit…"]Yamaha Referencvie Studio Monitor Review. Don't Buy HS80m Until You Read This. | Affordable Studio Monitor Archieve[/]="http://poweredmonit…"]Yamaha Referencvie Studio Monitor Review. Don't Buy HS80m Until You Read This. | Affordable Studio Monitor Archieve[/]

lambchop Thu, 01/20/2011 - 12:29

Hey, I'll give you another option. If, as you say, the purpose of these monitors is to impress the clients; how about considering building your own speakers. A search of the web and you should be able to find lots of books/material/sites on this subject. You could build yourself a copy of the old Altec Big Reds, or something else in that category.