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Re: [DTXpress] Re: help:clipping on powered speakers

2009-03-12 by dustin howard

For this purpose a compressor is the right tool for the job. It will allow you too have much higher overall volume before clipping. Properly set-up it will remove the extreme peaks inherent in the electric kit. Google on tips to set it up. Behringer makes very usuable compressors for the money. Hope ive helped!

--- On Thu, 3/12/09, niceguycolumbus1 wrote:
From: niceguycolumbus1
Subject: [DTXpress] Re: help:clipping on powered speakers
To: DTXpress@yahoogroups.com
Date: Thursday, March 12, 2009, 12:37 PM

Keith thanks for all your help. I feel quite inept at this. I rarely ever post to forums asking for help — a combination of common sense and "reading the manual" typically gets me to the right result.

However, this thing has me stumped. I just want to plug and play. ?!?!?!?!

There is actually a 5 band EQ on the speaker. Dropping the base does not seem to do anything significant. Plus, I get clipping on all drum hits, it's just more obvious with the bass. So, I don't think an EQ will be the solution.

The bottom line here is that if I drop all input signals low enough or drop the master volume enough to reduce clipping, I am not putting out much sound. It kind of defeats the purpose of buying the speakers in the first place. My goal was a simple ability to have a live monitor alternative to headphones, plus the ability to gig a bit with it.

I'm not looking to blow out the walls, so 1000w is beyond what I had in mind in terms of power and $$.

--- In DTXpress@yahoogroup s.com, "Keith" wrote:
>
> Doug,
>
> Two things you could do to reduce the bass:
>
> 1. make sure there is no bass boost on the DTXpress - utility menu EQ Lo=0
>
> 2. put an equaliser between the DTXpress and the amp. I have a cheap & nasty Behringer 9 channel one - it works OK but is a horrible plastic thing (unlike the Xenyx mixer I have which is well built).
>
> I don't think you have an equaliser on the amp, otherwise you could use that.
>
> It is a while since I looked into clipping, but assuming things haven't changed much, the problem with clipping is that a nice low frequency sine wave gets the top chopped off. This creates lots of high frequency harmonics which sound awful and blow up your tweeters. With a bi-amped design that is less of a problem because the bass distortion cannot get to the tweeter.
>
> If the clipping is not a sharp cut off, but "soft clipping" the waveform is more rounded, not as noticeable audibly and not as likely to blow anything up.
>
>; You may get some overheating of the amplifier or loudspeaker, although I would expect most amps to have a thermal trip in them.
>
> So, if your DTXpress equaliser is already at zero, you could buy a separate one to reduce the bass a bit (or even reduce the kick volume in the kit setup) or play and keep your fingers crossed while saving up for that 1000W PA.
>
> Keith.
>


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