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#125170 - 10/31/05 09:25 AM
Re: Bose PAS is a BUMMER!
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/08/02
Posts: 15576
Loc: Forest Hill, MD USA
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Originally posted by Clif Anderson: Mono. Do you really want the drums, bass, lead, and whatnot to sound like they are in the same position, or do you want them to sound like they are spread out, like in a real band? With the PAS, the sound is spread through the entire room--just like a real band. When you're using the Bose those sound do not seem to be coming from a single speaker, or pair of speakers. You must try the system in order to believe the difference you'll hear between the PAS and conventional PA systems. Cheers, Gary ------------------ Travlin' Easy
_________________________
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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#125171 - 10/31/05 11:11 AM
Re: Bose PAS is a BUMMER!
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Member
Registered: 02/17/00
Posts: 532
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Fran, there may be a better way for large venues. Actually, Bose recommends that each member of a band have a PAS behind him so that audience members can localize the sounds and experience some spread. I have attended a rock concern where this approach was used with PASs, and it works. This suggests that using multi-mono instead of stereo might provide spread even for large venues. For an arranger player, this might mean panning all instruments far right or far left. (If the keyboard has additional outputs, each can drive a different speaker in mono. Expensive, but should work.) As long as there is no common signal between speakers, there should be no phase cancellation. Also, it might be satisfactory to use weak (e.g., internal) stereo speakers with a PAS so that at least some people get a stereo effect.
Basically, if you are an arranger player contemplating the purchase of a PAS for mono use, just realize there is a significant compromise in spatiality involved.
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#125172 - 10/31/05 01:52 PM
Re: Bose PAS is a BUMMER!
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Senior Member
Registered: 06/25/99
Posts: 16735
Loc: Benton, LA, USA
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Originally posted by WDMcM: Hi Don,
One suggestion that was made on the Bose forum is to use a small keyboard amp sitting beside you for the right channel along with the PAS. Click HERE to go to that thread.
One thing that could be a potential downside of this idea is if you do have some heavy stereo imaging going on in a patch, i.e. stereo echo, rotary speaker sim., etc. the audience is only going to hear half of the effect at half the rate if you know what I mean.
All in all as you said, the only person who really benefits from stereo on a gig is the person playing the keyboard.
Best Regards,
Dave
Thanks for the info Dave. I don't mind it enough to tote another amp around. In fact, it's probably just different, not bad. Don
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DonM
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#125175 - 11/01/05 09:49 AM
Re: Bose PAS is a BUMMER!
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Senior Member
Registered: 12/08/02
Posts: 15576
Loc: Forest Hill, MD USA
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In small rooms the left and right channels bounce all over the place off the ceiling, walls, back wall, left wall, right wall. Anyone in the room will hear stereo.Think about this. If the sound is bouncing off the walls, ceiling, floor, then it is all combined into a single sound--MONO! The sounds are traveling at 5,280 feet per second. If those speakers are facing forward, which is the usual position, draw an equalateral triangle from the speakers and that is the area in front of the speakers that hears stereo. If you are to the left or right of a stereo speaker system, you cannot hear balanced stereophonic sounds. The band members are standing between the speakers, therefore they can hear stereo sounds, especially if the speakers are positioned a short distance to the rear of the performers. However, the only person that will hear a perfectly balanced stereophonic sound is the person standing directly in middle of the triangle. The best advice I have for anyone that has any doubts about the Bose PAS system is to take advantage of the 45-day Bose PAS trial, set it up, try it out, and be objective. Let your ears, and the ears of your audiences be the judge. If you don't like what you hear, send it back to Bose--they'll even pay the freight both ways--no questions asked. Esh was talking about phase cancelation, which can be a problem with a few, stereo sampled voices. Putting a bit of common sense logic to this, wouldn't phase cancellation be a problem with any amp that combines the keyboard's stereo output channels? Hmmmmmm! This means that most of the mono PA systems would reproduce the problem if the keyboard's output were routed into two inputs of a mono PA system. Something to think about..... Cheers, Gary ------------------ Travlin' Easy
_________________________
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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