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I'm looking for nearfields in the less-than-$600 range for my small 16' x 8' x 9' room. So far the candidates are Yamaha MSP5, Behringer Truth 2031, Yorkville YSM1P, and Yorkville YSM1 passive with my Hafler P3000 amp. What's the best for my budget? Can I expect a decent performance in this price range or should I save up for Genelecs or some other high end stuff?

Thanks for any inputs!

Michael L.

Comments

AudioGaff Wed, 12/31/2003 - 20:18

Can I expect a decent performance in this price range or should I save up for Genelecs or some other high end stuff?

Not only I do I think you should save up for not just decent or good monitors but to go all out and get great monitors. You deserve and owe it to yourself, your music and any clients that you will ever work with.

Davedog Thu, 01/01/2004 - 15:53

Genelec 1029's in a small room.Well worth the cash.Shop for used as they are really hardy and most likely can withstand high levels of abuse without fear.I know mine have!(not really abuse but lots of hours of service.)Also get a sub.I have the Genelec sub and have not regretted a single moment of my decision to spend this kind of dough.They simply make everything else involved with a mix much easier no matter what your level of gear going in.

anonymous Tue, 01/06/2004 - 20:00

I just returned from listening to a pair of MSP5's a friend just purchased. He made his choice primarily based on Kurt's review. I took a mix I've been working on as a reference and I have to say I was really impressed with the detail of these monitors. I'm considering getting a pair to go beside my 824's. Who knows, I might end up selling the Mackies. ;-)

drbam

anonymous Mon, 01/12/2004 - 14:58

i own a pair of Alesis Monitor One MKII they cost to me 270euro (pasive).well so far i am very glad for this babes ...i thing that the have the most lovely bass (they can reach 60hz like crazy)for these money and libres.
anyway good monitors are the monitors that you had used to work with , but these alesis are easy to listen and good bass.

anonymous Wed, 01/14/2004 - 07:43

I gave this opinion in the [[url=http://[/URL]="http://www.sweetwat…"]Sweetwater Control Room Forum[/]="http://www.sweetwat…"]Sweetwater Control Room Forum[/] just yesterday...glad I could reuse it.

I'll agree that you really need a sub to mix with 624s. I have an el-cheapo sub that I keep trying to take out of my studio (ugly, noisy, takes up space), but no matter how much I cut the bass in anticipation of the 624s underreporting the bass, I get mixes that don't translate--way too much bass. Then I cut, and I cut, and I cut some more until I'mmixing with my eyes, not my ears, and the results are what you'd expect: random. However, with a sub, it's possible to hear what the bass and kick are really doing, and it's possible to make mixes that translate.

Mackie is not kidding when they put an icon for "loves the 12" sub" next to the icons for "fragile", "this end up", and "do not immerse in water". Let me reinforce that: you you plan to drop your 624s on a regular basis or leave them soaking in the bathtub overnight (perhaps after a good drop), then you're probably the kind of guy that doesn't need a sub alongside them. Otherwise, you do.