02-10-2013 09:38 AM
I've been working in a club recently that has a pair of Ramsdell Audio 660R subs (http://www.ramsdellproaudio.com/products/subs/660r
02-10-2013 09:45 AM - edited 02-10-2013 10:00 AM
I'm not following the feedback issue with the monitors and how it relates to the amps. If you're getting feedback now that's telling you you've reached the limit of practical volume on stage. You either turn down or eq the feedback out. A larger amp won't help. If anything it will hurt as you'll now be able to get louder which will mean more potential for feedback.
02-10-2013 09:52 AM
02-10-2013 10:03 AM
02-10-2013 10:05 AM
02-10-2013 10:10 AM
So far, the consensus seems to be that I'm crazy. That's why I asked before I started reconfiguring things.
02-10-2013 10:11 AM - edited 02-10-2013 10:12 AM
02-10-2013 10:11 AM
So I'm not crazy?
02-10-2013 10:14 AM
02-10-2013 10:14 AM
Not crazy in that reconfiguring the amps makes sense, just not for the reason stated.
02-10-2013 10:15 AM
RoadRanger wrote:abzurd wrote:
It should help headroom on the subs as you're only at half the RMS rating currently."Headroom" is power you never use - why would anyone want more of it
?
I'm assuming you're joking.
02-10-2013 10:15 AM
RoadRanger wrote:
lonotes wrote:So I'm not crazy?
The "fun" thing about this forum is you can always find someone willing to tell you what you want to hear
.
The "voices" already do that for me. I know they're not real, but sometimes they have some good ideas.
02-10-2013 10:18 AM
02-10-2013 10:25 AM
RoadRanger wrote:
abzurd wrote:
RoadRanger wrote:abzurd wrote:
It should help headroom on the subs as you're only at half the RMS rating currently."Headroom" is power you never use - why would anyone want more of it
?
I'm assuming you're joking.
No, I'm not.
OK then. Headroom is stupid. Even if it's free. Got it. Stupid headroom.
02-10-2013 10:34 AM - edited 02-10-2013 10:38 AM
OTOH if you will be playing bigger venues where you need more SPL it would make sense to "power up" your stuff. If it is plenty loud now why bother? In any case your issue is monitor feedback so that's worth "fixing" first
. My favorite method is lowering stage volume
. IME if you are using more than 75 watts per monitor you'll need earplugs on-stage for sure
.
02-10-2013 10:38 AM
lonotes wrote:Would this give me any benefit regarding increased monitor volume at lower gain, thereby reducing feedback?
If you end up with the same level you'll end up with the same gain ... so no difference.
Unless ......
The only time you will benefit from lower feedback because of a bigger power amp is if you are increasing the gain of a smaller amp because it is not loud enough that would not be necessary with a bigger amp.
Feedback happens because of "gain" but not because of "power". But if you were comparing say a puny system to a system that had enormous what could end up happening is that you may continue to boost the gain on the smaller system even into clipping in order to get enough level. The loud parts wouldn't get any louder at this point but if you continue to increase the gain the quieter parts will (average level). This increased gain will cause feedback sooner.
With the small difference you are describing I doubt it's worth it.
02-10-2013 02:46 PM
Thank you all for your responses. That's why I love this place. ![]()
02-10-2013 02:57 PM
02-10-2013 03:15 PM
If you NEED it, it isn't headroom - not to hard to understand?
oldschooler wrote:
Sometimes i wonder where he comes up with this stuff. Contradicts his statements in message 15,
then gives a max 75 watts power rating for monitors.
I'm starting to think the best answer on the forum is, It depends.
Just for grins I once powered down some medium efficient monitors (95db/1W/1M) to 75 watts and had no problem getting them to max GBF with SM58's with just a tiny amount of clip limiting going on. That calculates out to 108.5 db at the performer's ear plus whatever the backline and adjacent monitors contribute (+3-6db?). I'll stand by my statement that you should be using ear protection at that level. Heck, in the bad old days we used a 150w mono amp running 3 monitors and I used ear protection. I'm presently using some 98db efficient monitors with 265 watts each so 117db at the performer's ears. I was plenty happy with the 150w each from RMX850's but went to IPR1600's for the MUCH lower weight.
02-10-2013 06:44 PM
Having headroom also means you don't have to run your gear as hard.
Using math to do specs in real life does not always work out. I honestly don't belive your little monitor can do 117 dbs constantly with 265 watts. They would have to do peaks into the 120 range to maintain 117 db.
Please do not mention the good old days. When I started bands weren't even asking for monitors, only the singers got them or everyone shared one mix. You were using 150 watts amps because that was all we had at the time. Weren't you drooling for bigger amps? I know I was. What we know/have now is light years from even 10 years ago.
Give your monitor to a drummer who hits hard, I bet your 75 or 250 watts isn't going to work for him.
About HCHarmonyCentral.com is the leading Internet resource for musicians, supplying valuable information from news and product reviews, to classified ads and chat rooms.
Advertise on HC