There's a difference between a "woofer" and a "subwoofer." A subwoofer is a separate speaker component that generally focuses on sounds in the frequency range of 25hz to 300hz. The part of the monitor you're referring to is simply a woofer. While monitors often claim a frequency response of 40hz to 20,000hz, the functional range doesn't usually make itself known or useful until closer to 80 or 100hz (on the low end) (and good luck hearing anything north of 15,000hz). As you alluded to, many genres of music don't really require faithful sound reproduction below 70hz, but for bass-heavy track's (or simply the desire to be as accurate as possible) a separate subwoofer is needed to supplement the two stereo monitors. Regardless, thank you for the post. It's always nice to hear someone else's opinion on the topic.
Wether a subwoofer is too loud depends on the volume you set for it - I suppose. As I understand it, the point of a woofer in a mixing context is not over-emphasize the sub bass but making bass audible where the physical limits of the full range speakers prevent that.
That's correct, although it annoys me that he calls the woofers subwoofers. Woofers tend to have a low end frequency response around 45 - 80hz, but subwoofers are made entirely for bass, not midrange and upper bass. A quality subwoofer will have a frequency response all the way down to 20hz and will cover up to 250hz which is the upper limit of bass.
@@bailey2517 Woofers normally go up to over 2000 in two way systems. The crossover frequency is the piece of info. Everything above goes to the tweeter everything below goes to the woofer
@@spareplanet I was giving 45 - 80hz as a range for the LOW end of the frequency response. I was just saying that most woofers won't go below 45hz, and most will be able to go down to 80hz or so. Sorry for the confusion.
Other comments have been made about subwoofers, but I want to reiterate and provide my opinion: a subwoofer will give you the ability to hear frequencies that smaller woofers simply cannot reproduce. It's not always about having obnoxiously loud bass. It's about knowing where your bass levels are with respect to other frequency bands in your mix. Even on a set of 8" monitors, you don't know what's really happening at 40 Hz. 40 Hz is a fundamental frequency used by many kick drum and bass synthesizer sounds. If you can't hear that low of a frequency on your monitors because you don't have a subwoofer and you include those elements in your mix, they could be played on a system that includes a subwoofer and the mix will be drowned out by the 40 Hz frequency because it will inevitably be louder than most of the rest of the frequencies in the mix since you were unable to correct its volume during the mixing phase of production. If you have a subwoofer, you can attenuate those low end sounds to make a mix that is more likely to translate to almost every other speaker system, regardless of whether or not it contains a subwoofer, because it was mixed correctly from the start (excluding systems with multiple subwoofers). Great video btw, hope I'm not coming off as a snob or anything. The only point of contention I had was related to the subwoofer because, in my opinion, a subwoofer is crucial for an accurate representation of the entire mix, regardless of the genre. I produce rap instrumentals and have a system with two 8" studio monitors and a 10" studio subwoofer for mixing, a system with two 5" monitors and a 12" subwoofer for my home theater, and a 12" subwoofer in my car, for perspective. Just some food for thought.
Thank you for your interesting tips. May I ask, what would make more sense, 8" studio monitors (Yamaha HS8) and an 8" subwoofer (Yamaha HS8S) or 5" studio monitors (HS5) and an 8" subwoofer (HS8S)?
You don't know how much I've learned form your channel! I don't think I'd know nearly as much if I didn't discover your channel. Keep it up! Btw I'm loving the sudden jump in the editing production!
Yep... I totally agree about subwoofers. They've usually just gotten in my way sonically. But that's MY experience with most types of music and voiceovers. And, being an old analog dude, I'm sure we're talking about way different kinds of music. Ultimately, ya gotta use what works for the project.
I do agree that size matters, and I think that your points are HELLA valid...however I don't think comparing 5 inch monitors to 3 inch monitors is very fair. there's a MASSIVE difference between 3 nd 5 inch woofers as opposed to 5 and 6 inch woofers. This did help me make a decision on what size monitors to buy though!
I think a major point of picking a particular monitor size is that you want the bass response of the monitor to fit the size of the room in which you're working. An 8" or 10" monitor in a small bedroom studio can overpower the space and the resulting mixes will translate poorly. A general rule of thumb for choosing a single pair of monitors is to match the monitor size with the room: Small monitors for small rooms; medium-sized monitors for mid-sized rooms; and larger monitors for larger rooms. Supplementing low end with subwoofers can help ensure the frequency range you experience in the space is well balanced. I use subs to ensure full frequency response, not to just have more bass. Another thing to consider in a typical tiny space is that if your desk is close to a wall, you might want to consider using monitors with front-facing ports. This can net a tighter, more detailed bass response because you're dealing with less low-freq. reflection off the wall behind the monitors than with rear-facing ports.
Hey Alex, currently buying a set of studio monitors, but not sure if I should EQ the speakers or even how to EQ the speakers. Would love to see a video on Soeaker EQ settings for EDM production if you can.
The difference of lows between 7'' and 8'' is so big. I first got Event Studio precision 8. Then I got Adam Audio T7V, and now I just got the Adam Audio T8V and oh shit it's night and day.
My room is about 12x15. I do have a lot of different angles and a lot of less reflective materials throughout the room to both diffuse and absorb reflections. I have a 4x4 and 2x4 kallax ikea record shelves a couch although I don't have any room treatment. I do have a sub, and I dont think I would be able to properly mix bass without it. I will say that I definitely listen to a ton of professionally mastered music that I know very well from decades of listening to that music in other environments on my monitors so I do have a good number of songs to use a point of reference to be able to make sure that my eq settings arent wildly uneven.
Hey kids! Woofers are the bass driver in the main speaker cabinet. Sub-woofers are in separate cabinets and add bass frequencies below(sub) what the main speaker can produce.
This video just came on time. I was about to sell my KRK 8" first G for a Adam T5V since I'm now in a small room. I'm starting producing house music in my home studio. Thank you.
I totally agree..i use PreSonus Eris E8 XT's as i play bass...sometimes 5 string bass's so i need a min of an 8" bass/mid unit... 30hz-35hz....just got to find the right place to put them in your room ,& good stands that lift the monitors tweeters high enough to ear level.....👍🎸
I say just go for a solid set of 5-7 inch monitors. I've got some KRK Classic 5s and they're deadly for the money, but there's other options in the size like Presonus Eris E5/7s, Alesis Elevate 5s, and and Adam Audio TV5s. You can always pair them with a studio sub.
@@jerrymartinbeats5653 oh... tbh... i didn't hear anything that was useful... small speakers can be moved easy... big speakers make me hear bass... useless...
Yea that's true because it was for beginner only as far as I conclude otherwise he would he talked about frequency response and soundstage and mtm speaker horizontal vertical lot of technical stuff as a producer as he owns 3 to 4 pairs
@@jerrymartinbeats5653 this is the first video I have seen from this guy... so I can not comment as to who its aimed at... for me... it did not hold much useful info... thats properly a better why to say it... haha...
if you look at the specs of your speakers you will understand that no matter what you think about it, you are definitely missing frequencies. In particular, those which are under 35hz. What is interesting to understand is that the subwoofer, being adjustable, allows you to find frequencies that your main speakers are struggling to reproduce. For example ... Let's say your speakers go down to 38hz, to -6db. Therefore, you should understand that this is the limit offered by your speakers. It’s a "flaw", nothing less! So if your subwoofer is adjusted to fully restore dB at frequencies below those possible with your speakers, you get a fuller sound, and more faithful to the recording. But beware! Adjusting a subwoofer is a very delicate technique requiring a VERY developed ear. Question: What is YOUR reason for not using a subwoofer in your stereo listening?
Cost. A good sub is expensive, and I check the lows with headphones for this reason. If cost and room acoustics weren't an issue, I'd definitely want one.
Get the 8 inches cause you won't mix well on the ones below...Big speakers translate well at any room if they are too loud just lower their volume..On small speakers you won be able to mix your subs & bass...So in club systems your songs may become boomy because of mixing in small speakers
Great videos :) but have you taken into account that for the monitors with sub-hole in the back, they need some airgap in order to let the bass flow properly into the room? My HS8 pair looses its bass because they can only be so close to the front wall that they almost touch it :/ do you have any experience with that?
"woofer" not "subwoofer" - is the name fo the driver that reproduces the bass in 2 and 3 way speakers. A subwoofer is a box specifically made for reproducing bass.
Hello Alex, very useful videos you make. In my case I need to choose between HS7 and HS8 for my room. I'm a guitarist who use the monitors to play with my guitar processors and modelers. The room dimensions are 4.3x2.7x2.7 m. Would you recommend me one over the other? Any thoughts would be appreciated. Thank you in advance.
How's your routing setup? Most audio interfaces with multiple "outs" only let you select one set of outs at a time. Usually 1/2 then 3/4. I'm thinking about adding some 8"'s to my existing 5"s and want to do this same thing. Thank you.
IAM a feature film editor using a Mac Pro tower and a 32 inch 4K monitor. I am in a fairly small room and I purchased the Yamaha HS5’s. I’m wondering if I should size up to the HS7’s instead. What do you think?
Not really unless your getting into filmscore. I've worked in TV and they use 4 inch studio monitors. 5 inches should suffice, your cutting audio checking gain and might use some EQ and rarely use a gate to bring down loud background noise between cuts. Well you should be cutting out unused scenes with background noise to begin with but a gate will suffice in a pinch if you need to send out reference edit material before a final edit to the director.
How do you feel about the hs8 vs Rokit g4 8 for a small room 10’x11’? I feel like the rokits front facing port may benefit my cramped space, but I have no way to test them and have to choose based off UA-cam videos.
You need speakers absolutely. Headphones should only be used for finding mistakes and very minor details in the music. You should always make the music sound good on speakers, because headphones tend to make music sound better, and they make it difficult to recognize changes in volume.
I don't understand. If you're producing in a studio, you want as flat (neutral) a sound as possible (across as wide a spectrum as possible), so that it reflect the actual sound. Then, when manipulating the raw (and preferably clean) music, you'll know what it actually sounds like. If your studio monitors have "character" or modify the sound the sound in any way, what you hear won't reflect the actual sound... so when others hear it - the mix might be terrible. Have I missed something?
Jerry Martin I tried against Yamaha hs5 and krk 5.. Yamaha is ok ok but krk is shit. best is go and try in music store, don’t trust on UA-cam reviews. If you can spend extra bucks then Focal cms series or Adam audio ..
Do you notice a massive difference between the 2 sizes? I have some presonus eris e5 xt's, and I'm thinking about saving up for some 8's. Just not sure if I'll notice that big of a difference.
If you have a sub then you don't need a 7" monitor. If you have a sub, I'd say to set the subs low pass filter at 80hz and get something like a 4-5 inch monitor
Hi thank you heaps for the comparison! For (mainly but not only) electronic music, deep house/electro french space pop/dance pop, etc. would a 7" woofer be ok or better to go to an 8" woofer, for bass frequencies I mean? And quality/better dynamic range/money wise, what are better? The Yamaha HS or the KRK Rokit G4? Thank you heaps!!!
After watching this video i realise i desperately need studiomonitors, not just one but two studiomonitors 😀 For those that didn't get, it i am talking about studiomonitors!
Hi, I am after some advice here i possible please. I have just bought 2 RP8 G4s to replace my RP5 G3s However my new RP8s produce less bass that the RP5s! The speakers are fine, not faulty, because if I plug them into my laptop in another room the bass is superb, so its the room. My question is, can the room be treated so the bass is felt, however the room is only about say 3 meters by 2 meters. Or is it just impossible for these speakers to perform in a room that size even if treated. Cheers Gaz
Do you calibrate your studio monitors ??? For example with Sonarworks Reference :) Because a lot of pros said that they are calibrating their monitors...... Thanks Keep it up Alex :)
After this video my studio monitors became 20% better! Wow
lmao
Thanks for the info, 3” are small and takes less space. 8” are big and takes more space and makes more bass. REALLY HELPFULL TIP
!
Lmfao. Almost like the video didn't need to be 8 minutes long...
That's what she said.
😂 Hilarious man! ... Be sure to buy his midi/sample pack! 👍🏻
@@bailey2517 This was as bad as they come on the Tube. Maybe slightly worse.
I was waiting for the ending to say “and today’s show was sponsored by the letter M” 😅
There's a difference between a "woofer" and a "subwoofer." A subwoofer is a separate speaker component that generally focuses on sounds in the frequency range of 25hz to 300hz. The part of the monitor you're referring to is simply a woofer. While monitors often claim a frequency response of 40hz to 20,000hz, the functional range doesn't usually make itself known or useful until closer to 80 or 100hz (on the low end) (and good luck hearing anything north of 15,000hz). As you alluded to, many genres of music don't really require faithful sound reproduction below 70hz, but for bass-heavy track's (or simply the desire to be as accurate as possible) a separate subwoofer is needed to supplement the two stereo monitors. Regardless, thank you for the post. It's always nice to hear someone else's opinion on the topic.
Super solid comment. Thanks for your help
Wether a subwoofer is too loud depends on the volume you set for it - I suppose. As I understand it, the point of a woofer in a mixing context is not over-emphasize the sub bass but making bass audible where the physical limits of the full range speakers prevent that.
That's correct, although it annoys me that he calls the woofers subwoofers. Woofers tend to have a low end frequency response around 45 - 80hz, but subwoofers are made entirely for bass, not midrange and upper bass. A quality subwoofer will have a frequency response all the way down to 20hz and will cover up to 250hz which is the upper limit of bass.
@@bailey2517 Woofers normally go up to over 2000 in two way systems. The crossover frequency is the piece of info. Everything above goes to the tweeter everything below goes to the woofer
@@spareplanet I was giving 45 - 80hz as a range for the LOW end of the frequency response. I was just saying that most woofers won't go below 45hz, and most will be able to go down to 80hz or so. Sorry for the confusion.
@@bailey2517 I should have realized that. Big "DUH" on my part. Lol
@@spareplanet I worded it poorly haha 😂
Other comments have been made about subwoofers, but I want to reiterate and provide my opinion: a subwoofer will give you the ability to hear frequencies that smaller woofers simply cannot reproduce. It's not always about having obnoxiously loud bass. It's about knowing where your bass levels are with respect to other frequency bands in your mix. Even on a set of 8" monitors, you don't know what's really happening at 40 Hz. 40 Hz is a fundamental frequency used by many kick drum and bass synthesizer sounds. If you can't hear that low of a frequency on your monitors because you don't have a subwoofer and you include those elements in your mix, they could be played on a system that includes a subwoofer and the mix will be drowned out by the 40 Hz frequency because it will inevitably be louder than most of the rest of the frequencies in the mix since you were unable to correct its volume during the mixing phase of production. If you have a subwoofer, you can attenuate those low end sounds to make a mix that is more likely to translate to almost every other speaker system, regardless of whether or not it contains a subwoofer, because it was mixed correctly from the start (excluding systems with multiple subwoofers).
Great video btw, hope I'm not coming off as a snob or anything. The only point of contention I had was related to the subwoofer because, in my opinion, a subwoofer is crucial for an accurate representation of the entire mix, regardless of the genre. I produce rap instrumentals and have a system with two 8" studio monitors and a 10" studio subwoofer for mixing, a system with two 5" monitors and a 12" subwoofer for my home theater, and a 12" subwoofer in my car, for perspective. Just some food for thought.
Thank you for your interesting tips. May I ask, what would make more sense, 8" studio monitors (Yamaha HS8) and an 8" subwoofer (Yamaha HS8S) or 5" studio monitors (HS5) and an 8" subwoofer (HS8S)?
Just a quick note, the large drivers are not referred to as "sub woofer" in full range monitors. Woofer would be correct.
take a shot everytime he says studiomonitor
You don't know how much I've learned form your channel! I don't think I'd know nearly as much if I didn't discover your channel. Keep it up!
Btw I'm loving the sudden jump in the editing production!
Yep... I totally agree about subwoofers. They've usually just gotten in my way sonically. But that's MY experience with most types of music and voiceovers. And, being an old analog dude, I'm sure we're talking about way different kinds of music. Ultimately, ya gotta use what works for the project.
Very happy with my 8inch Presonus Eris 8 XT in my small room. Deep bass
Nice advice ! Can't never be too big
Yup plus you don't have to turn them up to hear the smaller details, which extends the life of the speakers in comparison to running them near full.
I do agree that size matters, and I think that your points are HELLA valid...however I don't think comparing 5 inch monitors to 3 inch monitors is very fair. there's a MASSIVE difference between 3 nd 5 inch woofers as opposed to 5 and 6 inch woofers. This did help me make a decision on what size monitors to buy though!
I think a major point of picking a particular monitor size is that you want the bass response of the monitor to fit the size of the room in which you're working. An 8" or 10" monitor in a small bedroom studio can overpower the space and the resulting mixes will translate poorly. A general rule of thumb for choosing a single pair of monitors is to match the monitor size with the room: Small monitors for small rooms; medium-sized monitors for mid-sized rooms; and larger monitors for larger rooms. Supplementing low end with subwoofers can help ensure the frequency range you experience in the space is well balanced. I use subs to ensure full frequency response, not to just have more bass.
Another thing to consider in a typical tiny space is that if your desk is close to a wall, you might want to consider using monitors with front-facing ports. This can net a tighter, more detailed bass response because you're dealing with less low-freq. reflection off the wall behind the monitors than with rear-facing ports.
Hey Alex, currently buying a set of studio monitors, but not sure if I should EQ the speakers or even how to EQ the speakers. Would love to see a video on Soeaker EQ settings for EDM production if you can.
I love how he has upped his tutorial vids during quarantine!!!
Keep it up my man!!! 😁👍
Gold Forz glad to hear that from you my friend (:
The difference of lows between 7'' and 8'' is so big. I first got Event Studio precision 8. Then I got Adam Audio T7V, and now I just got the Adam Audio T8V and oh shit it's night and day.
My room is about 12x15. I do have a lot of different angles and a lot of less reflective materials throughout the room to both diffuse and absorb reflections. I have a 4x4 and 2x4 kallax ikea record shelves a couch although I don't have any room treatment. I do have a sub, and I dont think I would be able to properly mix bass without it. I will say that I definitely listen to a ton of professionally mastered music that I know very well from decades of listening to that music in other environments on my monitors so I do have a good number of songs to use a point of reference to be able to make sure that my eq settings arent wildly uneven.
I wish more people would compare mid-size monitors with a subwoofer vs large monitors.
Damn bro, you really be speaking about hell of important topics. 💯 Respect
I have yorkville YSM8s they’re amazing when you need to put together an 808 melody. You can actually hear the difference i the low octave notes 😝
Hey kids! Woofers are the bass driver in the main speaker cabinet. Sub-woofers are in separate cabinets and add bass frequencies below(sub) what the main speaker can produce.
I just got some krk classic 5 inch
This video just came on time. I was about to sell my KRK 8" first G for a Adam T5V since I'm now in a small room. I'm starting producing house music in my home studio. Thank you.
Watched every video from bottom to top during this Quarantine learned a lot from you ♥️
Keep posting awesome content ♥️
I totally agree..i use PreSonus Eris E8 XT's as i play bass...sometimes 5 string bass's so i need a min of an 8" bass/mid unit... 30hz-35hz....just got to find the right place to put them in your room ,& good stands that lift the monitors tweeters high enough to ear level.....👍🎸
What about black size do they matter to?
I say just go for a solid set of 5-7 inch monitors. I've got some KRK Classic 5s and they're deadly for the money, but there's other options in the size like Presonus Eris E5/7s, Alesis Elevate 5s, and and Adam Audio TV5s. You can always pair them with a studio sub.
Thanks for making this video and sharing your experience.
The melodious teacher in UA-cam
Alex your chords progression technique upscaled my skill around 30%
In one word you are doppppeeeeeeeee🌟🌟🌟❤️❤️❤️
The only point I felt missing was stereo imaging on moniters other things were made at least 20% better
What do you mean... whats the worry...?
@@garrybartlett6853 I mean he covered everything exept the soundstage and steriofield of diffrent size of speaker
@@jerrymartinbeats5653 oh... tbh... i didn't hear anything that was useful... small speakers can be moved easy... big speakers make me hear bass... useless...
Yea that's true because it was for beginner only as far as I conclude otherwise he would he talked about frequency response and soundstage and mtm speaker horizontal vertical lot of technical stuff as a producer as he owns 3 to 4 pairs
@@jerrymartinbeats5653 this is the first video I have seen from this guy... so I can not comment as to who its aimed at... for me... it did not hold much useful info... thats properly a better why to say it... haha...
if you look at the specs of your speakers you will understand that no matter what you think about it, you are definitely missing frequencies. In particular, those which are under 35hz. What is interesting to understand is that the subwoofer, being adjustable, allows you to find frequencies that your main speakers are struggling to reproduce. For example ... Let's say your speakers go down to 38hz, to -6db. Therefore, you should understand that this is the limit offered by your speakers. It’s a "flaw", nothing less! So if your subwoofer is adjusted to fully restore dB at frequencies below those possible with your speakers, you get a fuller sound, and more faithful to the recording. But beware! Adjusting a subwoofer is a very delicate technique requiring a VERY developed ear. Question: What is YOUR reason for not using a subwoofer in your stereo listening?
Cost. A good sub is expensive, and I check the lows with headphones for this reason. If cost and room acoustics weren't an issue, I'd definitely want one.
what smaller studio monitors would you suggest
is this a video about studio monitors?
Size matters everywhere :)
Ydk
I still don't know what size monitors fit my room best, thanks a lot.
Get the 8 inches cause you won't mix well on the ones below...Big speakers translate well at any room if they are too loud just lower their volume..On small speakers you won be able to mix your subs & bass...So in club systems your songs may become boomy because of mixing in small speakers
Great videos :) but have you taken into account that for the monitors with sub-hole in the back, they need some airgap in order to let the bass flow properly into the room? My HS8 pair looses its bass because they can only be so close to the front wall that they almost touch it :/ do you have any experience with that?
I got 5” krk monitors with their 10” sub. Perfect
God damn you solved my struggle of choosing which size, thank you so much
yeah this is a nice piece of video you made.
Love your way of explaining to us, and reassuring us too.
"woofer" not "subwoofer" - is the name fo the driver that reproduces the bass in 2 and 3 way speakers.
A subwoofer is a box specifically made for reproducing bass.
Do you think the M Audio BX8 D2 still hold up ?
great video, underrated channel
Straight to the point thanks.
REALLY GREAT OVERVIEW !
Hello Alex, very useful videos you make. In my case I need to choose between HS7 and HS8 for my room. I'm a guitarist who use the monitors to play with my guitar processors and modelers. The room dimensions are 4.3x2.7x2.7 m. Would you recommend me one over the other? Any thoughts would be appreciated. Thank you in advance.
Thank you!! This video very helpful for me. Direct to the point.
what's your reocommended headphones?
thanks, this is a great video!
thank you needed too hear this
I only need monitors good enough for mixing for a starter home studio that simple.
Nice video :) Which size would you say is right for near field monitoring in a 11 by 11 room. Mixing mostly pop and rock. Thanks.
Fun game: Drin k a shot of Vodka every time he says studiomonitors
Can't watch this video without laughing everytime anymore lol
Should I buy Yamaha hs-8 ? I generally produce house music, melodic dubstep and big room
Palak Chaudhary I love the Yamaha 8s. Really good monitors for all genres
@@AlexRome exactly it's an all rounder
you can't go wrong with the HS8s
@@JS-bo2xl yeah you're right
Can we start mixing and mastering on a home studio with presonus eris 3.5?
Aakash Pal of course
Yes bro i have those they are pretty good 👍👍
good luck with that 😂
I use all three types of monitors at the same time for the maximum effect
You rich bro
@@Aakash781 Thank you
Lol
How's your routing setup? Most audio interfaces with multiple "outs" only let you select one set of outs at a time. Usually 1/2 then 3/4. I'm thinking about adding some 8"'s to my existing 5"s and want to do this same thing. Thank you.
Amen! My thoughts exactly!💯 Thank you for sharing
Nice video, man. Thanks!
I have Yamaha hs7 monitors, should I tweak the bass switches on them if I want more bass output through them or leave them be ?
Great advice, thanks, man!
IAM a feature film editor using a Mac Pro tower and a 32 inch 4K monitor. I am in a fairly small room and I purchased the Yamaha HS5’s. I’m wondering if I should size up to the HS7’s instead. What do you think?
Not really unless your getting into filmscore. I've worked in TV and they use 4 inch studio monitors. 5 inches should suffice, your cutting audio checking gain and might use some EQ and rarely use a gate to bring down loud background noise between cuts. Well you should be cutting out unused scenes with background noise to begin with but a gate will suffice in a pinch if you need to send out reference edit material before a final edit to the director.
How do you feel about the hs8 vs Rokit g4 8 for a small room 10’x11’?
I feel like the rokits front facing port may benefit my cramped space, but I have no way to test them and have to choose based off UA-cam videos.
do you really need speakers or are good headphones just fine
You need speakers absolutely. Headphones should only be used for finding mistakes and very minor details in the music. You should always make the music sound good on speakers, because headphones tend to make music sound better, and they make it difficult to recognize changes in volume.
4:08 "and thats a very similar size for other studio monitor brands that are the same size"
I don't understand. If you're producing in a studio, you want as flat (neutral) a sound as possible (across as wide a spectrum as possible), so that it reflect the actual sound. Then, when manipulating the raw (and preferably clean) music, you'll know what it actually sounds like. If your studio monitors have "character" or modify the sound the sound in any way, what you hear won't reflect the actual sound... so when others hear it - the mix might be terrible. Have I missed something?
I’m using 2 pairs.. 5” and 8” .. Fluid Audio Fader Series f5 and fx8 ..
How are those fluids compared to all others
Jerry Martin I tried against Yamaha hs5 and krk 5.. Yamaha is ok ok but krk is shit. best is go and try in music store, don’t trust on UA-cam reviews. If you can spend extra bucks then Focal cms series or Adam audio ..
@@madnixxvlogs u rich! Good for u
Nc Brown No bro,, I’m not rich.. slowly slowly I saved money and bought My favourite Monitors.. and few other products..
Do you notice a massive difference between the 2 sizes? I have some presonus eris e5 xt's, and I'm thinking about saving up for some 8's. Just not sure if I'll notice that big of a difference.
Info was awsm . ...♥️♥️
Bdw intro VDO was cool as well as the apple promotion of sample packs 😂😍
Thanks dude!
What about a 10 inch sub for the bass, and 7 inch studio monitor to get mids and highs
If you have a sub then you don't need a 7" monitor. If you have a sub, I'd say to set the subs low pass filter at 80hz and get something like a 4-5 inch monitor
Hi thank you heaps for the comparison!
For (mainly but not only) electronic music, deep house/electro french space pop/dance pop, etc. would a 7" woofer be ok or better to go to an 8" woofer, for bass frequencies I mean?
And quality/better dynamic range/money wise, what are better? The Yamaha HS or the KRK Rokit G4? Thank you heaps!!!
Studiomonitors
Great review very informative
Alex do you prefer presonus 4.5 over the 3.5s ?
After watching this video i realise i desperately need studiomonitors, not just one but two studiomonitors 😀 For those that didn't get, it i am talking about studiomonitors!
this guy is funny asf and informative😂 subbed
can I use 7 inches studio monitors in a 4x4 room? thx
8 inch in the shower lol! Can yah hear the base, oops no treble. 🤣
Which speaker is good for mixing metal.. Death or black
Marshall Cabinet 4x12 =)
Thank you Alex🤟🏻
Hi, I am after some advice here i possible please.
I have just bought 2 RP8 G4s to replace my RP5 G3s
However my new RP8s produce less bass that the RP5s!
The speakers are fine, not faulty, because if I plug them into my laptop in another room the bass is superb, so its the room.
My question is, can the room be treated so the bass is felt, however the room is only about say 3 meters by 2 meters.
Or is it just impossible for these speakers to perform in a room that size even if treated.
Cheers Gaz
I make beats in a 2.2m x 2.4m and 2m height booth.
All walls are made of absorbing fabrics.
What size speaker should I use?
spot on!
Those are woofers. They are not designed to only reproduce sub bass.
We need a new studio tour vid
This man is the god of teaching,i became 20% better at producing in every video of him,since youtube recommended me this amazing youtube channel 💪🏻💪🏻
Neslo haha nice to hear man
Thanks for the kind words!
i have a 150 sq ft acoustic treatment room so which is the best studio monitor for me
that intro is fire
Great video!
for the keyboard which one do you recommend?
0:53
😂😂😂
That's my favorite part of the video
Love the new intro :)
Hey, which headphones do you use?
8 rockit Are the y worth to use as a dj on a terrace?
That’s what she said
Great video content! Really informative and helpful. :)
The bass of my Presonus Eris 3.5 are REALLY LOUD 😢
Lovely 😊 video, Alex!!!
Daeeeeeeem dat intro!
If it sounds good on Yamaha hs8’s it will sound great on a speaker
Thanks for the nice Video
take a shot everytime he says stewwwdiohh monitorszz
Do you calibrate your studio monitors ??? For example with Sonarworks Reference :) Because a lot of pros said that they are calibrating their monitors......
Thanks Keep it up Alex :)
SAJO yes I do! Sometimes though it just changes the sound for me instead of make them work “better”.
@@AlexRome Thanks for the honest reply.
My boy fresh of the hair transplant