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Sold By | Sale Price |
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Monoprice.com | $224.99 |
Amazon | $224.99 |
Rating: | (4.5 out of 5 stars) |
Reviews: | 8 Amazon Reviews |
Product Name: | Monoprice Stage Right Series, 15-Inch Powered Speaker, 1400W, SRD215, Class D Amp, DSP, Bluetooth Streaming |
Manufacturer: | Monoprice |
Model Number: | 600013 |
Product SKU: | B09GK8D6NP |
UPC: | 889028182123 |
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Again I installed the monoprices in a simple karaoke/music system being used in a large multi-use out building. The space is part vehicle workshop and the rest is setup as a bar/lounge/man cave.
This was an extremely simple budget system consisting of a Gemini GEM-12usb mixer along with Vegue wireless mics for karaoke.
Source material for karaoke is audio out from his tv via rca cables into the GEM-12 as he mostly uses youtube for his karaoke songs(I was surprised that yt had such a large karaoke library)
He also has a karaoke dvd/cd player which is rarely used(thanks to yt).
It's nothing fancy but everyone has a hoot during big get togethers.
Thoughts on using a pair of these for movies?
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What an external mixer allows is for you to input multiple sources such as microphones, cd player,etc and allows you to "mix" these various signals together to send out to the speakers. The mixer allows you to adjust the various signal levels, tone, effects levels etc individually to get the sound balance the way you want.
For instance...say you have a singer on one mic, an electric guitar, and a bass that you want to come through your speakers...you will plug those 3 signals into the mixer which will allow you to adjust each inputs volume, tone , effects levels etc so you get the sound and tone you want.
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Thoughts on using a pair of these for movies?
As for using in a home theater...they'd probably do quite well. Just keep in mind that even though these have 15's in them, don't expect deep "lfe" bass. This is typical for most pro-sound speakers...heck...even large pro-sound subs do not dig down into the very low frequencies(30hz and lower). With the typical 80hz high-pass crossover point used in most home theater processors these should work well with plenty of mid-bass thump and more than enough spl capabilities in even large theater rooms. I installed them in a roughly 24'x-36' open shop/building and two speakers can get very loud in there.
I'm definitely not gonna use it for Bluetooth. I'm talking about plugging instruments pretty much direct to it.
Now if your asking how they sound at lower volumes vs wall shaking levels...they are not bad at all. The family member I installed them for often uses them for just normal tv watching to boost the sound quality compared to what comes from the tv's speakers. So no...these don't have to run at "blow your hair back" levels to sound good. But like most speakers...you will need a bit of volume to "feel" the bass...again...that's true with most speaker systems unless you heavily boost the low end with an EQ.
Also...the internal mixer can only handle two inputs(A & B) so if your going to be needing to directly input more than two instruments, microphones, etc. your going to need an outboard mixer.
Now if your asking how they sound at lower volumes vs wall shaking levels...they are not bad at all. The family member I installed them for often uses them for just normal tv watching to boost the sound quality compared to what comes from the tv's speakers. So no...these don't have to run at "blow your hair back" levels to sound good. But like most speakers...you will need a bit of volume to "feel" the bass...again...that's true with most speaker systems unless you heavily boost the low end with an EQ.
Also...the internal mixer can only handle two inputs(A & B) so if your going to be needing to directly input more than two instruments, microphones, etc. your going to need an outboard mixer.
I was simply asking if you can get low volumes. On "real" guitar cabinets 0.01-5% volume is nothing an
6% - 100% is too loud for a house. I don't recall my old PA settings because I never had a house during those years so it was always to turn it up loud. So I was making sure that it's only guitar an bass amps that do the stupid loud volume only thing
6% - 100% is too loud for a house. I don't recall my old PA settings because I never had a house during those years so it was always to turn it up loud. So I was making sure that it's only guitar an bass amps that do the stupid loud volume only thing
I do not play guitar but, funny enough my mom did, so I have been around guitar amps quite a bit and your right...volume and gain knobs on some amps basically work more like an on/off switch...either you get ALL the sound or hardly any.