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Anyone tried the Blue Sky Media Desk 2.1 monitors? I've seen lots of great reviews, but haven't seen much pro forum discussions on them. I like the option of being able to upgrade to 5.1 for another $500. I like mixing on transparent, "brutal truth", near-fields such as the NS10's, but the NS10's are now SO expensive ($1000), I'm not sure if the cost is justified anymore.

Ross McAfee
Noise Gate Audio, LLC.
Denver/Boulder

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anonymous Thu, 09/06/2007 - 14:06

Hi
Blue Sky is aiming at a few different audiences with their monitors, Media desk, as you may know is the starting point.
I have this setup in my "programming suite" and i can tell you this. At low to moderate levels SPL, its a well balanced honest system, and a sure buy..
But if you pass 89dB SPL, you are lost in the hifi space again, The sub will keep up, but the small mids dont..THIS IS ONLY MY OPININON! and i might be proven wrong, but if you want to be able to do some -low level - high level comparisons- i suggest you go with Pro-desk or the Sky system.
/Thomas - Hitfarm recording

cathode_ray Fri, 09/07/2007 - 05:38

[quote=DocRoc] I like mixing on transparent, "brutal truth", near-fields such as the NS10's, but the NS10's are now SO expensive ($1000), I'm not sure if the cost is justified anymore.

Would hardly call NS10 transparent - brutal yes but not transparent.
I think the rational is "...if they sound good on NS10's, it will sound good anywhere!"
When NS10's became fashionable they supplanted Auratones which up to that point seemed to represent the "least commom denominator" but the single driver had certain benifits.
Good luck on yer search.

anonymous Sun, 09/09/2007 - 10:46

Yeah, I meant transparent as no coloration / no sweetening / brutal truth.

Ranson, I appreciate the feedback. I'll be using these mostly in my home studio setup for mix down only. And my home is actually an apartment, so noise levels will have to very rarely pass 89 dB. So maybe this should be the option for me???