Re: PA speakers or floor monitors or both?
2017/10/02 18:48:14
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PA speakers generally need wider horizontal sound dispersion than vertical and floor monitors generally have greater vertical sound dispersion than horizontal. Which makes sense if you consider the different way they are used. The restricted horizontal spread of monitors can be very useful in avoiding feedback and sound spill as it restricts the sound level reaching mics that are outside the loudest part of the speaker's dispersion pattern. It makes doing an individual mix for different people a bit easier as well because there's less direct sound-spill going on from the monitoring system, and absorbent or plexiglass isolation panels can be used to divide the acoustic space up more easily if you use floor-wedges.
On the plus side, the PA-style approach means the greater sound spread might mean needing to use fewer speakers, but that might not work so well for recording purposes if you have sound spill problems.
As Cactus Music says, if you get modern trapezoid-shaped PA cabs they can be used vertically on a pole or other platform for PA or laid with a long side on the floor and used as monitors. Which makes them a convenient solution for both approaches, just shift them around as required by whoever's using the studio or where you need to put mics and other stuff when recording.
After that it's a matter of deciding how much you are going to spend and finding something in that price range.
For what it's worth, which isn't much, my personal rehearsal monitor preference would be for a mix of floor monitors and PA-style side-fills.
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