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Re: Powered Subs
Kris,
You will love the subs.
Another person mentioned that subs allow you to deliver a BIG sound at
moderate volume levels. That is precisely why I use them on my system.
Incidentally, a 32' open pipe (Contra-low C) has a wavelength of 64'
at 1056/ft per second that equates to a frequency of 16.5hz. The
sound of a flue pipe is kind of like a tympani roll -- a reed pipe
sounds kind of like a motorboat.
One does NOT need these huge pipes to play the organ -- but, oh man...
when they are there the sound is awesome! :)
Enjoy those subs!
-- Kevin
Quoting Krispen Hartung <khartung@cableone.net>:
> I just bought two of the powered Mackie 1501s. I couldn't resist the
> Guitar Center price. :) The rooms I would be using these for would
> be anywhere between 100 to 500 seaters, or a medium size club (10K
> square feet?)
>
> Kris
> ----- Original Message -----
>
>
> What kinds of rooms Krispen? The PA I had most experience with
> was 2 x 2x18 push-pull cabs with 2k watts apiece, and it was
> amazing outside on an open field, and removed tooth fillings
> indoors. We were on sort-of a budget, and used Peavey but the sound
> was clean enough that Ray Brown (amazing jazz bassist) used one of
> these as his bass amp during a jazz performance on our campus and
> remarked "wow! that's serious low end, I like it" If it's enough
> pound for outside, and clean enough for jazz upright bass, I'll take
> two :)
>
> When we unpacked everything in a store room, hooked it all up in a
> gleeful rush, put in the then recent crystal method vegas cd, and i
> skipped to 'cherry twist', while my boss said "hey, do you think
> this thing is going to be very loRRRAAAAAAMMMP" as three foam
> ceiling tiles fell down because I "accidentally" had several knobs
> marked gain turned up beyond reasonable levels.... Delicious.
>
> I also conveniently had neutrik speakon connectors for the
> subwoofer for my van at the time, and this subwoofer in there was
> just insanity. It was an astro, and it would open the side windows...
>
> <end of bass nerd gush fest>
>
>
> On Jan 2, 2008 8:27 AM, Travis Hartnett <travishartnett@gmail.com>
>wrote:
>
> An octave below 41.2Hz would be 20.6Hz.
>
>
>
> On Jan 2, 2008 8:06 AM, Krispen Hartung <khartung@cableone.net>
>wrote:
> > As many folks know on the list, I use laptop processing via
> max (looper,
> > other octave effects) that completely transform the sound of
> my guitar. It
> > is not uncommon for me to play a low E on the guitar (82.4hz), and
>then
> > apply a two octave drop. I'm not sure what that would be. It
> would be below
> > 41.2hz, which is low E on a bass guitar.
> >
> >
> >
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> ---Miles Ward