Sweetwater[sweetwater.com] has 3.5" Yamaha HS3 Powered Studio Monitors (Pair; Black) on sale for $172.77. Shipping is free.
Product Specs:
Features a space-saving form factor and an eye-grabbing NS-style look
Boasts a superior bi-amplified bass-reflex design
3.5-inch cone woofer and a 0.75-inch dome tweeter yield an impressive 70Hz–22kHz frequency response
Room Control switch allows you to tailor the speaker's low-frequency response to your listening environment
High Trim switch customizes the speaker's high-frequency response
Accommodates XLR/TRS combo, RCA, and stereo mini input connections
Anti-slip feet ensures that the speaker stays put
Includes 1.5m mini-to-RCA cable and 2.5m speaker cable
Community Notes
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The whole Yamaha hs lineup has that peak. That's why some people think that the hs series are bit fatiguing after a long mixing session.
I have the hs5 and the peak never bothers me
Studio monitors are supposed to have flat frequency response, that's the whole point of them. If you mix on speakers that add too much of their own color, you risk improperly compensating for the peaks and valleys you hear in the studio and the final mix can sound bad on more accurate playback equipment.
Studio monitors are supposed to have flat frequency response, that's the whole point of them. If you mix on speakers that add too much of their own color, you risk improperly compensating for the peaks and valleys you hear in the studio and the final mix can sound bad on more accurate playback equipment.
You can't make headphones or speakers absolutely flat that's just not possible.
You can look at beyerdyanmic headphones like the DT770 and DT1990 they have that 6k peak
Last edited by Commando102 June 25, 2025 at 03:22 PM.
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https://www.spinorama.o
Neither are the exact speaker you are talking about, but may give you some idea. Looks like the Yamaha have more problems, mainly that huge peak.
https://www.spinorama.o
Neither are the exact speaker you are talking about, but may give you some idea. Looks like the Yamaha have more problems, mainly that huge peak.
That huge peak at 1Khz and large dip afterward just a little higher is a no go in my book for those particular Yamaha! Period.
The whole Yamaha hs lineup has that peak. That's why some people think that the hs series are bit fatiguing after a long mixing session.
I have the hs5 and the peak never bothers me
I have the hs5 and the peak never bothers me
Studio monitors are supposed to have flat frequency response, that's the whole point of them. If you mix on speakers that add too much of their own color, you risk improperly compensating for the peaks and valleys you hear in the studio and the final mix can sound bad on more accurate playback equipment.
You can't make headphones or speakers absolutely flat that's just not possible.
You can look at beyerdyanmic headphones like the DT770 and DT1990 they have that 6k peak
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You can look at beyerdyanmic headphones like the DT770 and DT1990 they have that 6k peak
He meant generally flat not absolutely flat.
Monitors from genelec, Neumann, and others have very flat responses. Dan Clark headphones follow the Harmon curve very well
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