red7of9 said:
Would that be the 808M powered mixer by Mackie? If so, is there ever an issue of overloading the power source? A JBL 15"......that makes me laugh. We use to use those for sidefills!! Those babies put out some sound. You don't have to ask guitar players to turn down do you...lol!!! I have a 406M FR 2x250 watts Mackie it's only a 6 channel, so if you are using the 808M, I'm sure I could use this and there would be no concern of blowing fuses. I have Yamaha monitors, but they are only 12" speakers and no independant volume or tone controls. I could see how that would make things soooo much easier to sound check yourself.....even being able to adjust during the show. Cool!!!!!
<**Delurk**>
The speaker Aja is using is the JBL Self Powered EON 15. It has a built in crossover, 2 seperate amps (100 watts for the 1 inch horn and 300 watts for the 15") and can take both 1/4" (unbalanced, hi-Z) and XLR (balanced low-Z) inputs. If you have more than one , you can daisy chain them with an XLR cable to give you more coverage.
The best part is that it has JBL amplifiers inside with a crossover designed to work with the speakers. Though they will probably deny it they also do some selective EQing inside the box.
Most of the powered mixers have rather low quality amplifiers designed to work well for either low volume acoustic stuff or speaking engagments. They can get loud but the quality suffers severely.
Personally I prefer the sound of the new 10" EON. It is clearer to my ear and since I don't like a lot of lows in my monitors (keeps the mix clearer and more defined) the 10" is more than adequate. It is plenty loud and it is lighter to boot. Did a video premier outdoors at a local university and we were getting complaints from homes several hundred feet away and the only thing pointed that way was a single 10" EON!
Self Powered monitors are a great way to go if you don't have a lot of room for racks and gear. The down side is if one of the amps goes :hotjump: you are screwed until you can get it to a shop. The amps are not field servicable or replaceable.
I doubt the amps in your mackie could do any damage to your Yamahas, I used a variety of Yamahas for years and never had a problem (except when I mis-wired a cable and sent the lows to the horn and melted the driver!) I would highly recommend getting a graphic EQ for each seperate monitor mix with at least 15 bands (2/3 octave), 31 is much better(1/3 octave). This way you can cut just the frequencies that give you trouble and get more gain out of your monitors without feedback. If you do get an eq, I recommend not using it to boost frequencies (or at least as little as possible) as that is trying to add something that is not really there.
If you have any tech questions please feel free to PM me so we can keep the boards clear for the Maidens stuff!
Up the Irons!<**Lurk**>