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Singers & Hosts Wisdom Post how to be a great karaoke singer or host. |
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#21
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i tend to agree with Lonman, amps should be higher rated than the speakers, if not amps would work harder to bring out the full sound of the cabinets, and this will lead to clipping...
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BILLY O' WEEKEND.DJ Las Vegas, NV |
#22
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BILLY O' WEEKEND.DJ Las Vegas, NV |
#23
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i have the 2 fold cart that i bought from pssl.com for 90.00 but instead of using dj tables, i bought 2 keyboard stands, one with 2 tiers and a regular stand all i do is put a 14x 36 carpet covered plywood over one of the top tiers sit my laptop on it and used the bottom tier for my dj 14x32 coffin that i built myself ( i bulid dj/kj racks for a hobby too, which i have done for most of my kj friends for free ) which houses my board and my 2 cordless mic transmitters and cables, i can set up/tear down in 1/2 an hr..i can haul all my stuff in just one trip.
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BILLY O' WEEKEND.DJ Las Vegas, NV Last edited by billyo; August 17th, 2009 at 09:27 PM. |
#24
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Audio signals are a/c voltages. Speakers will fry if they receive d/c voltage. Some of the older solid state amps could send moemtary d/c voltage spikes to speakers when you first fire the amp up. Most newer quaility amps have delays or protection built into them to prevent this from happening. If you use an amp that doesn't have enough power for your application the tendency is to turn it up beyond it's clean power rating which then starts sending a form of a square wave instead of a sine wave. Depending how bad you are clipping the amp, the square wave is seen to the speaker as some dc voltage. The voice coil overheats and that is bad news for the speaker or driver. Even is you have an amp that is powerful enough for your application it has the protential to send transient peaks that are capable of causing speaker/driver damage. Some amp and powered speakers have clipping L.E.D.'s that show when the amp is clipping. This helps give you a warning as to what your speaker may be seeing. Some have protection built into the amps just for this reason. I like to use a limiter to help prevent to much clipping. I have found that karaoke disks can often have very different output levels from song to song. A limiter will help level things out. I used to rebuild or recone speakers years ago. The only break in I would do was hooking up an low amplification signal generator set for low frequency in order to have the cone move in and out to make sure the coil in the speaker was properly aligned and not rubbing. May of the home speakers (woofers) have a foam surround at the outer edge of the cone to allow more cone movement for low end frequencies. This foam rots from age and humitity. It will also stretch if the speaker is over driven with much power at the low frequency spectrum and this will somtimes cause the voice coil to rub a little in the magnetic gap that it travels in. If it starts rubbing the coating on the windings of the voice coil the coating will start coming offf and it is possible for the coil to burn in spots until it opens up. The speaker is dead that point. Hope this helps.
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#25
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So true, an underpower amp is the worse piece of equipment you could own. However, there are exceptions to everything. Depending on what you are going to use the speaker power situation for. But as a general rule, i've never fried a speaker cab by using an underpowered amp, in any situation i've performed at. But i can't say i haven't blown one the other way. If i know i'm going to need more power i take more. I have at times whished i'd had a larger more powerful amp, but i got by with using a bit of common sense. I purchased my new LCD desk top color monitor from Markertek Broadcast Supply, it is actually 5.6" to be exact, and it was $229.00 they work great. The brand name is "Delvcam" you can mount them almost anyplace, 12 Volts, and it runs off a wall wart, and if you turn the screen upside down, the picture remains upright. So there are many mounting options.
Billyo what type of speakers did you say you were using? just curious, not sure you mentioned that, sorry if i didn't catch it. And that sure sounds like a real neat setup system you have. Glad you have it all going well for you. "May of the home speakers (woofers) have a foam surround at the outer edge of the cone to allow more cone movement for low end frequencies. This foam rots from age and humitity. It will also stretch if the speaker is over driven with much power at the low frequency spectrum and this will somtimes cause the voice coil to rub a little in the magnetic gap that it travels in. If it starts rubbing the coating on the windings of the voice coil the coating will start coming offf and it is possible for the coil to burn in spots until it opens up. The speaker is dead that point. Hope this helps." Walt you are spot on my man, i have a Peavey Black Widow 1501 Shallow Basket steel guitar speaker, i have 4 of them to be exact. And i took two of these fantastic papar cone speakers, and repaced the magnets with their new Neodymium replacement mags. And the first thing i ran into was that stupid white foam. Peavey told me to wipe the basket clean, and make sure that burnt stuff is all out, then to bolt down the neodymium magnet. I like peavey for the fact that their baskets and mags are field replaceable. And you are in the right direction with that speaker break in as well... " Last edited by Musicman51; August 17th, 2009 at 11:08 PM. |
#26
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i have a pair of Mackie SRM 450 that i used for my show ,and a pair of Mackie 1521z for big venues, a pair of 6" ES (Especial Editon ) KRK Rokit studio monitors paired with a KRK v12s11 v series 10' sub, good enough to used for small clubhouse type parties, and a pair of KRK 8" studio monitors paired with the same 10' subs good enough for backyard parties and all systems has a separate mackie boards and i also have the same type (KRK"s) speakers/subs in my studio that is in my garage.. ( all Mackie/KRK speakers are powered )
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BILLY O' WEEKEND.DJ Las Vegas, NV |
#27
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I also agree that an under powered amp will cause as many problems as over-powering. If you use a 1000 watt amplifier into 250 watt speakers you will blow out the speaker as easily as using a 40 watt amp into 500 watt speakers. So basically try to match your speakers and amp close enough to be able to get the best sound out of both. Your better quality speakers will list a minimum and a maximum power rating.
Now the next question is what percentage do you set your amps at for the optimum output? 50%, 75% or 100%? All of my training has taught me that 75% gives you optimum performance with no distortion or clipping.
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Dale Douglass 2nd Generation Karaoke I am not a member of the MTU Staff.
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#28
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Again I have known SEVERAL people/companies that have blown speakers/drivers with amps that weren't even close to the program ratings of the speaker. I have always been taught by SEVERAL sound engineers - including 3 that have worked with Nirvana, Pearl Jam & Soundgarden - to open the amps wide open as the mixer is the the pre-amp controller.
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#29
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when i used to used power amps i used to have it all the way up 100%, and my board is up to unity gain, and use my channel gain to turn up/down the sound...i have the volume to 12'0clock on my powered speakers and use my board & channel fader to turn the volume up/down
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BILLY O' WEEKEND.DJ Las Vegas, NV Last edited by billyo; August 18th, 2009 at 09:17 AM. |
#30
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Jim
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#31
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I've never seen any live acts ever run their power amps to the screaming point just to hold the power back by another means. Kinda like holding the gas pedal down to the floor then holding the car back to the correct speed with the break...lol Sorry i'm just too clumsy and not brave enough to try it.
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#32
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BILLY O' WEEKEND.DJ Las Vegas, NV |
#33
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I want to thank those that did help try to answer my question, although we did get mislead a little, i suppose it's all related in one way or another. To git back to my original question, yes i do believe in a speaker break in period. Here are a few responses those in the know had to say. Thanks again for all the support.
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#34
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Even the "expert" can't agree, eh George. I guess it is that way in any technical situation. You go with what sounds best to you and your customers in our case.
Now as for the Amplifier settings there again it is up to you to find the optimum range for your amp. First off from purely a technical view an electronic amplifier circuit be it solid state (transistor) or older tube version is at its peak efficiency with 75% power applied. Beyond that the amplifier circuit will clip and distort the signal. However depending on the quality of the Amp unit (the whole box) you buy will determine your setting. The higher-end (quality not price) units are adjust so that 100% of you volume control is actually roughly 75% power to the amplifier circuit. This way you won't distort or clip your signal. The lesser quality Amps do not have this and will be much more likely to distort if you use maximum power. George, unless the bands instruments are also fed through a sound board you won't see them run wide open because they do not have any other control on volume except the instrument amp. That said if you run you amp at the higher volume then control the amount of input with a sound board/mixer then you output will be a cleaner crisper sound at the volume level you desire. This also puts all your control (mics and music) in one location.
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Dale Douglass 2nd Generation Karaoke I am not a member of the MTU Staff.
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#35
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Break in Period
George, i guess one question in this forum leads to another and begins an endless cycle with theory after theory. I, IMHO, believe the "break in period" for a speaker is about 10 minutes. If it don't "break", its "broke In".
As for amp settings, I turn the amp wide open, all mixing boards i use have slides with factory reccommemded pre-settings, and the trim control is recommended to fine tune one's sound to prevent clipping. Again, never blown a speaker in over forty years setting up sound for clubs, arenas, and outdoor venues. I, however, did like your phrase of the gas pedal and brake. Quite a good comparison i thought. Enjoyed your imput muzicman144: |
#36
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What you are proposing may be true, actually not entirly, there are so many variables that no blanketed rule applies here. This is fine if all you use is a mixer and amp. But you add in other things in the input pre amp path and this is not neccessary a rule to follow. You add EQ from an outboard EQ unit, it adds volume, you add compression, it to may add volume, you add a sound enhance ie: DBX BBE they have a volume control, Lexicon reverb, they have most generally two volume controls, pre and post. So you see, you are at rated volume for your speakers at far less then 75% of your amps operating potential. You couldn't use 75% of your rated amps power, with these variables ratioed in, with the average speakers that most fella's are using, regardless of brand. Although as i said, the 75% rule may be a norm for some, it is not by any means a rule of thumb. Just not necessary to achive the full potential of your speakers rated output. By adding effects, and these things i have mentioned into your signal path you will under almost all circumstances get an incease in preamp modulation, sine, and signal. So much so, that if you ran your power amp at the 75% rule, on top of this hot output signal, it may very well spell disaster. I have noticed through the years, especally with the younger folks, for some reason, the more power one has, the more one turns things up and uses it. Again, caution is the key here. If i have a 100 watt power amp, then if i buy a 200 watt power amp i will be twice as loud right? nope.... It's called "Head Room" which is what the 75% theory is trying to achieve, but does it? It is easy to paint all situations with a broad brush. Thanks Again...George
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#37
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But I agree with muzic as far as speaker break in for the most part. The speaker is going to break in from the first time it's plugged in and producing sound. Plus many manus bench test each speaker for a couple hours to get true spec ratings & this could be considered a break in.
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#38
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Each person has a setting that sounds good, and works for them. I wasn't aware there were so many written in stone rules for what's correct, and one must follow to be the correct position..new to me...lol If it works for you then i think it's correct. If it doesn't work that way for someone else, and they set their mix up differently, then thats what works for them. I think this thread has pretty much gone it's distance..thanks for everyones views....
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#39
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I used to have 3 b&W tv in my rack for cueing up the next singer, so I've got those but they are bulky and could never get them to work with my home security camera's. Back on topic: I would sure think that if a breakin period was necessary the manufacturers would include this information with their product otherwise they would get stuck with claims against the warranty that might have been avoided. Sam |
#40
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Agree with Sam, if a breakin period were required, the manus would state that in their manuals.
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