EvilDragon wrote:880 are a bit more linear than 990 though, 990 has a 9 dB bump around 100 Hz region
The DT-880 are semi-closed, though, which is why I went with the 990. But I'd say the whole series is pretty good.
Beemer wrote:Studio monitors (unless full blown recording studios) are designed to reproduce what the average listener will hear listening to a CD, not to replicate the low notes of a digital piano never mind an acoustic one.
I disagree on that one. Active(!) studio monitors are very common and they are designed as tools to assess a mix. For that purpose a premature decision what the listener might or might not hear is counterproductive, which is why studio monitors as a class feature a much 'flatter' frequency response than normal speakers. Also there is such a thing as classical recordings, and people listening to those are much more demanding when it comes to the quality of the recording and mix. The point being: you'll always want monitors that tell you the "truth" about what is in the recording, adding nothing and leaving nothing out. A studio monitor that cannot do this is not a studio monitor at all.
And because of this, active monitors actually are a tool you will find in real-life studios. Of course frequency responce in the lowest range is a problem for every speaker system. Active monitors do have an advantage here, since they feature their very own amplifier that can be tuned specifically to them. If one really wants to boost the lowest frequencies (I find that with 8" speakers and larger there is really not much need, though), many monitors can be complemented with a subwoofer.
Beemer wrote:The normal frequency range of a piano or digital equivalent is from 27Hz to 4186Hz.
This is a statement I don't really get at all. What's your point, exactly? The lowest note on most grands is indeed the sub-contra A at 27.5 Hertz. However, this is in a frequency range where most humans have difficulty hearing notes as notes, since we are very close to the infrasonic range. What most humans actually hear in this range is a low-frequency rumble plus harmonics. Chords don't really sound like chords either.
So I daresay a speaker system which has a decent frequency response down to 40-50 Hertz is good enough, since of course there will not be a hard cut-off below. And the 4kHz for the c''''' are not the full picture either. Again there's a lot of harmonics to be considered; in fact I'd say a piano like many acoustic instruments can even produce ultra-sonics. Which is a very real problem when recording them... but not for playback. For playback, everything that manages decent linearity up to 20kHz is fine, yielding an effective 'interesting' range of 50Hz-20kHz.
Last edited by kalessin (05-10-2014 17:37)
Pianoteq 6 Standard (Steinway D&B, Grotrian, Petrof, Steingraeber, Bechstein, Blüthner, K2, YC5, U4, Kremsegg 1&2, Karsten, Electric, Hohner)