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Knottyhed

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Honestly, Behringer PA gear is pretty much the worst you can get, even Peavey is better.

 

The reason is cheap is twofolds: they copy the design from other companies and then build it with cheaper components.

 

You can buy a complete Behringer kit if you want, but one day or another you'll want to move upward and will lose a lot of money because it has no resale value.

 

Having gigged a lot over the last couple of years, I've played through numerous PAs and have learned to hate two words: Behringer and Mackie. Whenever we see one of these words somewhere, something will sound wrong. I particularly hate their powered monitors, they have no guts and too much highs (Behringer being the worst one since it's a copy of a Mackie with cheaper components), the preamps on their board are shrill (I know I own one!). I prefer Yorkville mixer and powered speakers much more, and they are far from being that good (except the higher-end models).

 

There are things you can get away with (I always carry a Behringer DI box, just in case... it might be noisy but not enough to be a problem in a gig, and it runs off phantom power!), but for the core of your system (mixer, amps and speakers), do invest the additionnal money in something better!

 

It's not that much more money to get something better. For the board you might look at Soundcraft's E serie, or the M (which I think has built-in FX), or Allen & Heath (Mixwizard or PA). You might also want to look at the used market: for the same price as a brand new Behringer mixer (which has no resale value), you can buy a quality board which you can sell for the same price if you don't like it.

 

Powered mixers are quite handy, but if possible, it's better to have everything separate (if your power amp dies, you still have a usable mixer!).

 

Anyway, Yorkville makes very reliable gear, and you might also want to take a look at Yamaha and Carvin. There are others of course. If you want to buy Behringer, go ahead, but remember that you cannot get "filet mignon" at a BigMac price.

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We have a Behringer PMX2000 powered mixed that we use for rehearsals and small gigs. It has beed fine for the last 3 years. We always carry backups, and use the Bose PAS sticks the majority of the time now. If you buy Behringer, buy the extended warranty, because if it breaks, they will give you a new one and throw the broken one in the dumpster. The Behringer sounds good for smaller gigs. YMMV. Our other gear is JBL, Yamaha, QSC, Peavey, Sennheister, Shure, etc.

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We had a beringer PA mixer. I thought it was OK until I bought a Mackie mixer and our band all of a sudden sounded great. From what I understand, the difference is in that the Mackie has great pre-amps in each channel. I agree that the beringer is really a low end product.

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Originally posted by Hardtailed

Honestly, Behringer PA gear is pretty much the worst you can get, even Peavey is better.


.

 

 

I would not use Peavey as a negative, Peavey makes some great gear. I think they make great products that sustain a lot of punishment. I have never had a single Peavey unit fail (amps, guitars, mixers, monitors). They have all been very good (and at a good price).

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Originally posted by fuzzball



I would not use Peavey as a negative, Peavey makes some great gear. I think they make great products that sustain a lot of punishment. I have never had a single Peavey unit fail (amps, guitars, mixers, monitors). They have all been very good (and at a good price).

 

 

Man, I couldn't disagree more. Every piece of Peavey equipment I've ever used has eventually failed (usually multiple times). I'll bet you'll find a lot of people have the same experience.

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my band recently bought a small PA consisting of a Carvin powered mixer (PA1200), low-end Peavey FOH speakers (PV215), and Behringer monitors (F1220).

The Carvin died after about 8 hours, but they replaced it and so far the new one has been great through 2 gigs.

The Peavey speakers are OK. Not great, but not terrible. If I could replace any piece of the system it would be those. They sound flat and somewhat muddy.

The real suprise has been the Behringer monitors. They sound great, and are built very heavy duty. I would not hesitate to buy a couple of Behringer FOH speakers similar to these to replace those Peaveys.

However, I don't think I would ever trust a Behringer mixer.

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Originally posted by riffdaddy



Man, I couldn't disagree more. Every piece of Peavey equipment I've ever used has eventually failed (usually multiple times). I'll bet you'll find a lot of people have the same experience.

 

Yeah, Peavey builds tought {censored}... that sounds like ass! :)

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Originally posted by Knottyhed

So the general consensus seems to be that Behringer amps and mixers don't last 5 minutes and sound crappy unless at low volume? Does anyone have anything more to add about their speakers/monitors?

 

 

The guy above seems to be satisfied, but frankly the worst monitors we've ever "experienced" on stage were powered Behringers. They're only thing worse than Mackies. I'd rather have an old Peavey passive monitor with some old but powerful power amp than those pos.

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Originally posted by LosBoleros

We had a beringer PA mixer. I thought it was OK until I bought a Mackie mixer and our band all of a sudden sounded great. From what I understand, the difference is in that the Mackie has great pre-amps in each channel. I agree that the beringer is really a low end product.

 

 

Interesting, I've had quite a few Mackie mixers and I think my Behringer sounds better. Maybe I have a higher end Behringer, it was a bit pricey.

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Originally posted by fastplant



Interesting, I've had quite a few Mackie mixers and I think my Behringer sounds better. Maybe I have a higher end Behringer, it was a bit pricey.

 

 

As I mentionned earlier, Behringer and Mackie preamps are very similar. Behringer is know for "reverse engineering" competitiors product. Their preamps are basically the same with just a few components changed so they can get away with it (and Behringer cuts more corner to build them).

 

But honestly, it's not like Mackie is a reference... They're good at marketing, but their products are average at best.

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Hardtailed,

Not every Peavey product is excellent, they do have some products such as their cheaper monitors that are decent at best, but most people will tell you that Peavey gear holds up great and most of it sounds good. I have used a lot of their gear and never had a problem. Some of their cheaper monitors sound a little muddy, but in some casses it is operator error. I think if you ask around you will find that every brand has some complaints, and Peavey has a good track record for good quality products. By the way don't base you opinions on rented gear (not saying you are), rented gear is never a way to judge quality. People beat the crap out of rented gear.

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i would dissagree with anyone saying that peavey gear is cheap stuff and fails often. i've been using peavey pa gear for the last 15 or so years. alot of our speakers are homemade with peavey woofers in them. we use a lot of peavey amps. although we have had some failures on peavey gear(maybe 3 times in 20 years) i am well pleased with their product. just about all manufactures make professional grade and cheaper grades. if you buy cheaper you run the risk of more failures. or sound man who has been running sound for 25 years and is an electronics technician for morrison brothers music and charles hall music in mississippi is featured on page 96 in the new peavey monitor magazine with some equipment of his. read the article. he can tell you how good peavey equipment is.

 

 

kevin james

 

www.monkeyboneband.com

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Originally posted by fuzzball

By the way don't base you opinions on rented gear (not saying you are), rented gear is never a way to judge quality. People beat the crap out of rented gear.

 

 

No don't worry, I'm talking about owned stuff. All the rental places I deal with would never rent Peavey gear (honestly). Yorkville and Yamaha? Yes some of them. Actually, we've got a kick ass sound once with a "medium" Yamaha board (I thought it was a big one until another soundman showed up with a Yamaha PM3000C at another gig, now THAT is a big board) and Yorkville speakers which were composed of powered "tops" (4 of them) and passive subs with something like a Crown or QSC power amp. What was in the rack was pretty low key (Behringer and Samson compressors and effects) but the guy behind the board was a genius, the sound was kicking.

 

Our preferred soundman is the guy with the PM3000C, he use Drawmer compressors and gates, Lexicon and Yamaha reverb (even has a TL tube mic preamp) and higher-end EV speakers (with dual 12" in the tops instead of the typical 15": much better mids, and dual 18" subs). Not a single powered speaker or monitor. He provides us with 4 monitor mixes (a rare occurence it seems!) and have 31 band Ashly EQ on all mixes plus the mains. He also has a plethora of cool mics (like 5 MD421 "just in case"). But the whole thing is close to a 1/4 M$ (really!). So I guess it's not the kind of PA that a band would own!

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Originally posted by fastplant

Interesting, I've had quite a few Mackie mixers and I think my Behringer sounds better. Maybe I have a higher end Behringer, it was a bit pricey.

I guese as with everything, all brands have different level of units.

 

 

There has been alot of defense for the Peavey stuff. I too owned a Peavey Mixer that worked fine for 10 years. Rugged, yes indeed. Quality sound, not so much.

 

It's hard to tell the difference sometimes because you are not in a situation where you are comparing two systems side by side.

 

I know now that with my Mackie 1604 vlz everything sounds crystle clear and the side effect of that is that you do not need to turn things loud to be heard. Every channel has it's distinct sound. I play my guitar real low in the mix and yet people tell me that they can hear every little thing. It seems that our mixes are now more forgiving.

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Originally posted by Hardtailed



As I mentionned earlier, Behringer and Mackie preamps are very similar. Behringer is know for "reverse engineering" competitiors product. Their preamps are basically the same with just a few components changed so they can get away with it (and Behringer cuts more corner to build them).

One of the first things you notice is that the mackie board weighs about three times what the berringer does. I am using my mackie for recording now and the results are great.

 

I remember once I opened up for another group and we each had our own PA set up. ours was Berringer and theirs was mackie. When we made an anouncement with ours, it was hard to understand. When we switched to the mackie, it was clearer and the message was delivered much better.

 

It seems that most music stores in my area have berringer as their low end stuff and mackie as one of the high end stuff. If Berringer does make a quality unit, at least the stores around here are not selling it.

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Originally posted by LosBoleros

One of the first things you notice is that the mackie board weighs about three times what the berringer does. I am using my mackie for recording now and the results are great.

 

 

That's because they use cheaper components

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I think you have to judge Behringer gear on a case by case basis. Some of it is great, some of it is awful, and all of it is inconsistent as far as QC is concerned.

 

My Behringer FX unit is brilliant; it sounds fantastic and is still working perfectly, 2 years and many gigs on. However, it appears to be the exception to the rule in terms of reliability and quality control.

 

In my experience, their mixers are great for people starting out as they give a good feature set for the price and enable people to start putting a system together. They are not, however, comparable to A&H, Mackie or Soundcraft in terms of quality and longevity.

 

Their rack gear (compressors, gates, FX) seems to be better, and there's been less reverse engineering going on as well. Their compressors are becoming more and more ubiquitous amongst UK hire companies, I see more and more of it about at festivals and gigs.

 

I wouldn't recommend their speakers, though. They're well made, carpeted and solidly put together, but they sound mushy and indistinct. A friend of mine had one of their wedges arrive dead, and another fail soon after.

 

Just my personal experiences, hope it helps.

 

Tom

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My poor experiences with Peavey have mostly been with their power amps, though I can't say I've been all that pleased with their mixers. FOH speakers and monitors are sort of a different thing altogether. I've found decent Peavey cabs and I've found junky ones too. I wouldn't discriminate with anything other than my ears when it comes to speakers/monitors because it's damn near impossible to break them.

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