Just curious, what were you running through those Yamaha DXR10's ? I like them because of the built in 3 channel mixer and stereo link feature. Plus yamaha quality.
Thanks
Bill...
Here was my set up for the wedding reception on Saturday.
Signal Chain...
Yamaha Motif ES7 - Piano Sounds and Full Sequences
Sonar VS-100 - WAV files on SD playing sequences from older workstations
CD Player
iPod from the Bride
Apple Mac Book Pro running iTunes using a Tascam US-122 Interface
Shure Beta58a Male vocal (me)
Audio Technica 3000 series wireless vocal (my wife)
Line 6 Wireless for speeches.
All went into the Mackie DFX12 mixer
No processors direct into the DXR10 via the XLR... one left and one right.
Played all types of music through the night. Not a big dancing crowd but still played some modern dance stuff. A bunch of country line dancing songs. Those 10" little speakers did extremely well on the low end. Outdoors, I could have used a sub but it was raining off and on and the power was limited. We were under a tent but when the bass was pumping at the end, the rope light we had on faded during the kick drums.
I own...
RCF ART 312a (Main Speakers for big gigs)
RCF ART 310a (Monitors or Main for smaller gigs)
Yamaha MSR100 (Use at church for contemporary service)
The RCF speakers sound great, that's why I bought them. I do need to tweek them a bit because the mid range they produce. The Yamaha DXR10 sound great on there own with out any type of processing. At $599 a box, they are the better choice over the K10. If they were available when I bought my RCF 310a, I would have picked the Yamaha DXR10.
~Johnathan