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<blockquote data-quote="Heatho" data-source="post: 148569" data-attributes="member: 487"><p>AM when I played guitar (before my brain injury left me unable to) I loved the baby Marshall's, they seriously sounded good for such a small amp. With stuff like this for detecting I think one needs to look at the fequency response chart if available and pick one with a bump in the low mid freq-mid range around 700hz-1.4khz, same with headphones if unable to actually test in person.</p><p></p><p>Great music headphones don't maybe mean they are good detecting headphones in my opinion, what's your thoughts on that AM or do you believe an excellent full range flatter frequency response is more beneficial for detecting?</p><p></p><p>I used to use a crap pair of Sony headphones for mixing albums but I was used to them and the record would translate well on other systems for me. Every music studio has a set of Yamaha NS10 monitor/speakers, they sound crap for enjoying music but are a good reference point and have a very sensitive mid range, no subs and a nasty high freq range, if it does not hurt on the high freqs on NS10's the record will sound dull on most other hifi systems.... Most techo's have a good grasp on this stuff and i'd be interested in your thoughts.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Heatho, post: 148569, member: 487"] AM when I played guitar (before my brain injury left me unable to) I loved the baby Marshall's, they seriously sounded good for such a small amp. With stuff like this for detecting I think one needs to look at the fequency response chart if available and pick one with a bump in the low mid freq-mid range around 700hz-1.4khz, same with headphones if unable to actually test in person. Great music headphones don't maybe mean they are good detecting headphones in my opinion, what's your thoughts on that AM or do you believe an excellent full range flatter frequency response is more beneficial for detecting? I used to use a crap pair of Sony headphones for mixing albums but I was used to them and the record would translate well on other systems for me. Every music studio has a set of Yamaha NS10 monitor/speakers, they sound crap for enjoying music but are a good reference point and have a very sensitive mid range, no subs and a nasty high freq range, if it does not hurt on the high freqs on NS10's the record will sound dull on most other hifi systems.... Most techo's have a good grasp on this stuff and i'd be interested in your thoughts. [/QUOTE]
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Metal Detectors
Detector Accessories
Amplifier/speaker/signal booster information
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