My 800 and other 800's i've been playing on I havn't heard neither a negative or positive effect on OTOH.
Maybe I'm retarded or deaf - but it's the truth for me...

They SHOULDN'T sound bad though, as the mixer supposedly has enough headroom to cope when the signal is up that high (a figure of +22dBu springs to mind, which would be +18dB on the level meter assuming 0dB=+4dBu). Yeah, you have to allow for crest factor, but that's still a pretty HOT signal that SHOULD be getting through that mixer UNDISTORTED.sine143 wrote:sorry mate, but red does sound AWFUL on a pioneer 700/800/900/2000. I can peg it from the door of the club. crunch mode engage.
As a bonus, if both the channels and the master are in the red, its easier to cue in the headphones. If you are running the channel at say "1 orange" but the master is only at neg 8 or whatever, it can be hard to balance the headphone cue with the master (in the headphones).88h88 wrote:Pioneer mixers are known for their shitty handling of hot signals, they just distort wildly. Allen & Heath's range although absolutely diabolically laid out and massive un-intuitive to use have a far better bunch of electronics on the output end. On most club systems it's hard to tell what the fuck is decent quality anyway considering how poorly thrown together some are. On a well adjusted BFM setup though? It should be night and day.
The problem is DJs using the mixer itself as a limiter "if it's smashing the reds I can't get any louder so I don't have to watch my gain levels!" and the mixer's handling of said levels which is always always bad when it comes to Pioneer. I say this as someone who owns Pioneer too...
The only way for Pioneer to combat this is to just remove the fucking red lights and disable gain entirely over a certain amount. Which they'll never do. Even when you adjust the output on the mixer itself down to 0db from the 12db it comes pre-set to it's still easy to end up in the red. People just don't understand about ear fatigue, your ears will lie to you after spending time in a really loud environment, trust the fucking electronics!
I do have remote access to the Driverack but nothing is going to stop the headliners from turning that master all the way up88h88 wrote:Here's the site for the joint: http://www.clubtherapyri.com/osse wrote:So, have the opening night taken place yet? I don't think I speak only for myself when I say that the interest in it is of high interest...how did it go?
Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/therapyri
Opening in 11 days.
hifibob, how are you going to manage unruly DJs who run Pioneer mixers into distortion?
That's just teasing.hifibob wrote:Good thing I have the Master himself coming to town to dial this beast in!!
Pretty high praise, from our curmudgeonly sensei. I'm quite looking forward to checking out the club. Any chance of a soft opening, for BFM aficionados?Bill Fitzmaurice wrote:I visited the club today to help Bob dial in the system and check out the room acoustics. If I was playing this room with my band we'd use a pair of DR200s or DR250s and a pair of T48s. His eight DR280s and twelve T60s would easily handle a room at least four times the size of his.![]()
The in-room response is phenomenal. I walked it from side to side, front to back, with my handheld RTA, and it's uniform everywhere. The output is crazy. A couple of times we had it up to 120dB halfway back in the room, with not the slightest hint of any distortion. No one could complain about the quality of this sound, and that was with the room empty. I noted a couple of acoustic improvements that need doing, and with those complete and the dance floor full of bodies this place is going to set a whole new standard for high intensity club sound.
The club opens at 12 midnight tomorrow, Friday the 17th/Saturday the 18th. It is only open from 12 AM to 6 AM Friday night/Saturday morning and Saturday night/Sunday morning.Rich4349 wrote: Any chance of a soft opening, for BFM aficionados?
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