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#104659 - 03/30/03 08:52 AM
Re: Monolith vs double X stand
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/08/02
Posts: 15576
Loc: Forest Hill, MD USA
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Hi Scott, As you can see by my equipment post that I use a Quik-Loc stand, which is rock solid and quite rugged. It holds two keyboards and set up time is a few seconds. A spring loaded pin positions the stand and unless the welds break, I don't think it will collapse.
I also have an Ultimate Stand, one that also holds two boards and made from heavy-gauge aluminum tubing. Set-up time however, is about five minutes because every part must be assembled.
As for an attached mic, I don't recommend them at all. I've used them on both stands, and other than for announcements, they present problems. First, the mic must be switched off during performances because the sound of your fingers on the keyboard's keys are transmitted through the keyboard stand and produce the same sound that you would hear if the mic were on a normal stand and your fingers thumped against the stand--not good.
If you are a singer, as most of us are, and also a reader, the mic is never in the right position to see the music/lyrics and still maintain the correct position in front of the mic to provide good vocals. For that reason, I switched to a headset mic and eliminated all of those problems. You may want to think seriously about the headset mic instead of attaching one to the keyboard stand.
Cheers,
Gary
_________________________
PSR-S950, TC Helicon Harmony-M, Digitech VR, Samson Q7, Sennheiser E855, Custom Console, and lots of other silly stuff!
K+E=W (Knowledge Plus Experience = Wisdom.)
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#104660 - 03/30/03 09:40 AM
Re: Monolith vs double X stand
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/01/99
Posts: 12800
Loc: Penn Yan, NY
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Now for the point-counterpoint: Stand mounted mics MAY transmit a small ammount of residual noise IF the kb stand is not solid, and IF you bang real hard on the keys, and IF your mic is set too loud. Many, many players (including DNJ, Fran and myself, on this forum) have used this method for YEARS with no adverse effect. The trick is in the construction - you need a good solid, bounce free envirnment, and you need to have the proper settings on the mic levels. Singing over a kb with internal speakers requires that the mic technique be a "close" one. Kissing the mic, if you prefer. That allows the most signal to enter the mic with the LEST amount of outside noise allow with it. Headset mics reduce feedback problems, but there is not even ONE model that comes close to the quality and sound that a hand held mic can provide. If you are willing to sacrifice vocal quality and mic technique ..... a headset will provide you with less feedback and a small amount of ease of set up .... if you like being tied to the amp, and feeling like a hospital patient with a monitor in your temple. ( ) Needless to say .... the headset is NOT for me.
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No longer monitoring this forum. Please visit www.daveboydmusic.com for contact info
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#104661 - 03/30/03 09:48 AM
Re: Monolith vs double X stand
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Senior Member
Registered: 11/19/02
Posts: 2866
Loc: Tampa, FL
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Scott, I guess it's no secret on this forum that I am a BIG proponent of the Ultimate Apex keyboard stands: http://www.ultimatesupport.com/apex.html For me it provides the following key attributes: Rock Solid Memory positions for keyboards. Ultra fast setup/break down. Will hold 2 200 lb keyboards or ONE really big musician. I love the single post concept as it does not take up much room when I setup in very tight stages. I also like the legs on the bottom for positioning my pedals so they don't "Creep" on me. Well there you have it, I've used this stand for 60 gigs in the last year and I'm convinced I would not use anything else. Al G [This message has been edited by kbrkr (edited 03-30-2003).]
_________________________
Al
Pa4x - LD Systems Maui 28 - Mackie Thumps
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#104664 - 03/31/03 11:14 AM
Re: Monolith vs double X stand
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/01/99
Posts: 10427
Loc: San Francisco Bay Area, CA, US...
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I concur with Pro. My VOTE also goes to the Quiklok Monolith Stand, though it doesn't support a mic boom or music rack add on. The Monolith is the only portable (collapsible folding) stand that I would say is truly 'rock steady' preventing your Keyoboard from bouncing, like the X stands and Apex stands tend to do. Another reason I don't like the Apex stand is because the center column juts up high ABOVE the keyboard and can block your face (from the audience). For super quickie gigs, I'll probably take the Quiklok X Stand, but for 'anything' more, the Monolith stand offers rock solid KB stability, and it looks so MUCH more slick & professional as well, and offers a LOT more leg room for pedals, and saves your knees as well, because there are no obstructing cross X beams to contend with. The great thing about the Monolith is that it folds completely FLAT. - Scott
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