Anyone try these. Look impressive and Turbosound used to be a respected name.
That’s exactly what I like about it!The dispersion wouldn't do it for me.
"Nominal Dispersion 60° H x 40° V @ -6 dB points"
Anyone try these. Look impressive and Turbosound used to be a respected name.
The Yamaha DXR manual is informative on what DSP does in a typical active PA speaker:They say it has a "DSP" which makes me think room correction, but maybe it is just a digital EQ?
Sorry I made this go off topic, but how is the volume out of the Dynacord compared to any other speaker? Does it have headroom for loud stages?The Dynacord is 90 degrees...
As I now also own a CLR (also 90 degrees) I can directly compare them and the CLR wins for me soundwise by a little bit. The feature set of the Dynacord is better though.
Anyone try these. Look impressive and Turbosound used to be a respected name.
DSP means digital signal processing. It could be doing any number of things.
Ha, LOL. I'm familiar with DSP technology, but thanks for taking it easy on me . I guess I figured it might be doing more than EQ & Limiting if they called it out on the spec sheet (e.g., let you ring out a room to get a flatter response). Looks like presets for particular rooms and usage types (on stand, on floor, with/without a sub)).
There is a Windows app to connect to the Turbosound speaker, but I'm on MacOS so I can't see if it lets you dial in custom EQ settings.
Having it find resonances and applying notch filters like a feedback suppressor would be awesome. I have a DBX unit that does that.
Sorry I made this go off topic, but how is the volume out of the Dynacord compared to any other speaker? Does it have headroom for loud stages?
I<snip> And there is an app you can purchase (can't remember the name right now) for $10 that will 'listen' to the pink noise and flatten your PA (by controlling one of the graphic EQs inside the X32).
Same thing a driverack does.
<snip>)
It wouldn't be possible for a speaker to flatten the response for a room, since that's location dependent.Ha, LOL. I'm familiar with DSP technology, but thanks for taking it easy on me . I guess I figured it might be doing more than EQ & Limiting if they called it out on the spec sheet (e.g., let you ring out a room to get a flatter response). Looks like presets for particular rooms and usage types (on stand, on floor, with/without a sub)).
There is a Windows app to connect to the Turbosound speaker, but I'm on MacOS so I can't see if it lets you dial in custom EQ settings.
Having it find resonances and applying notch filters like a feedback suppressor would be awesome. I have a DBX unit that does that.