INTERACT FORUM
Devices => Sound Cards, DAC's, Receivers, Speakers, and Headphones => Topic started by: JimH on June 26, 2014, 04:57:24 pm
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The JRiver Id works well when you have a sound system or DAC you want to play to, but I've got a couple of situations (bedroom and garage) where I don't have anything to amplify the sound. So I'm looking for some good powered speakers. I'm willing to spend about $200 or $300.
In this thread, I'm going to keep notes on speakers I've tried.
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Marshall Stanmore (http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss_1?url=search-alias%3Delectronics&field-keywords=marshall%20stanmore&sprefix=marshall&tag=wwwjrmediacen-20)
Nice sound, decent bass. Two 1/8" stereo inputs, or RCA, or optical.
Retro styling.
$399 at Best Buy
I'm testing the analog out on the Id.
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I'm using a Lepai LP-2020A amplifier (http://www.amazon.com/LP-2020A-Lepai-Tripath-Class-T-Amplifier/dp/B0049P6OTI/&tag=wwwjrmediacen-20) along with normal speakers.
My dad also bought one of them to use on his porch (controlled with Gizmo!).
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Sony SRSX7 (http://www.amazon.com/Sony-SRSX7-Portable-Bluetooth-Wireless/dp/B00I053I5G/&tag=wwwjrmediacen-20)
Good sound. DLNA, Airplay, or Bluetooth. 1/8" stereo in.
Connect via Ethernet cable or wirelessly.
$299 at Best Buy
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Matt - do those little amps work OK. I was looking at some (almost like a "plate" amp for speakers) but I was not convinced they had the headroom for anything half decent.
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Matt - do those little amps work OK. I was looking at some (almost like a "plate" amp for speakers) but I was not convinced they had the headroom for anything half decent.
They're fine for casual listening. I'm using one in the bathroom and it's nowhere near the top of the volume. But if you want to deliver a big thump, look elsewhere.
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@Jim- I don't own any powered speakers at the moment, but a good friend of mine has a pair of JBL LSR 2325P (http://www.amazon.com/JBL-LSR2325P-Two-Way-Bi-Amplified-Monitor/dp/B001PYK1BS/&tag=wwwjrmediacen-20) monitors and absolutely loves them.
Matt - do those little amps work OK. I was looking at some (almost like a "plate" amp for speakers) but I was not convinced they had the headroom for anything half decent.
@jmone- I use a couple of the same amps around the house and I've found that for most non-subwoofer speakers and most listening environments they're plenty loud.
Most speakers have a sensitivity in the high 80s or low 90s of dB at 1 watt. That means that the little lepai will drive most speakers into the high 90's or low 100's, which is plenty loud enough for casual listening in most medium rooms. I wouldn't use them in a "reference" system (for a couple reasons), but they're plenty loud enough for an office or kitchen (or bathroom ;D ) setup.
One tip if you grab a lepai amp: consider replacing the ac adapter. The one's they ship with are a) a little cheap and b) can't deliver enough power for the amp to operate at it's rated power output. A slightly higher volt or amp ac adapter will help squeeze a little more "oomph" out of it.
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Thanks. Do you have a link to a better power supply?
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Thanks. Do you have a link to a better power supply?
This is the one I bought to use with my Lepai 2020's: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B003Z6ZR5O/ref=oh_details_o00_s00_i01?ie=UTF8&psc=1
You can see in the reviews that lots of other folks are buying them for the Lepai amps.
The Lepai is rated at 20 watts per channel (@4 Ohms) which means the power supply needs to be able to deliver 40 watts plus losses for amp operation (no amp is 100% efficient). Class D amps are much more efficient than traditional amps (85% to 90% efficient at full power), so you really need at least 45 or 50 watts at the power supply to get to the rated power. The supply it typically ships with can only deliver 24 watts; the one linked above can deliver 60 watts (and costs 6 dollars).
It's been a little while since I measured, but I think my Kill-A-Watt showed the amp/power adapter combo using about 4 or 5 watts when the amp was on but idle.
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The JRiver Id works well when you have a sound system or DAC you want to play to, but I've got a couple of situations (bedroom and garage) where I don't have anything to amplify the sound. So I'm looking for some good powered speakers. I'm willing to spend about $200 or $300.
In this thread, I'm going to keep notes on speakers I've tried.
I've used Audioengine A5 powered speakers for years for a near field application. Sound is good throughout the room and the adjacent room. The smaller A2s have gotten good reviews but they have a smaller bass driver and a bass response hump to compensate. A fact of life for a speaker with a < 5" bass driver to sound reason able w/o a subwoofer.
The relatively new JBL LSR305 (http://www.amazon.com/JBL-Professional-LSR305-Studio-Monitor/dp/B00DUKP37C/&tag=wwwjrmediacen-20) and 308 (http://www.amazon.com/JBL-Professional-LSR308-Studio-Monitor/dp/B00E8CEW7I/ref=sr_1_4?s=musical-instruments&qid=1403959415/&tag=wwwjrmediacen-20) active monitors have gotten rave reviews.
The Audiophiliac blog has reviews of a number of inexpensive powered speakers including the new Emotiva Airmotiv 5s active monitors.
http://www.cnet.com/audiophiliac/
I'll look at the JBL 305s, the Amotiva monitors and some models in the $ 1000-2000 per pair range when I need new near field powered speakers.
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Good sound.
Nice sound, decent bass.
Serious question. What is higher on your scale, "Good" or "nice with decent bass"?
I've actually been looking for powered speakers myself too.
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Sony SRSX7 (http://www.amazon.com/Sony-SRSX7-Portable-Bluetooth-Wireless/dp/B00I053I5G/&tag=wwwjrmediacen-20)
Good sound. DLNA or Bluetooth. 1/8" stereo in.
Connect via Ethernet cable or wirelessly.
$299 at Best Buy
Actually, it also supports AirPlay in addition to DLNA, Bluetooth, and the analog input.
The battery life is poor when using DLNA or AirPlay though, and I thought the sound quality was terrible.
DLNA does not work correctly with Media Center either - though I've yet to see DLNA work well with anything.
I bought a pair of them a while back and ended up returning them.
If you don't need portability - and I'm not sure why you would if they're connected to the id, I would not buy a wireless speaker at all. Buy a pair of active monitors or use regular bookshelf speakers with a small amp, which actually gives you proper stereo sound.
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Serious question. What is higher on your scale, "Good" or "nice with decent bass"?
I've actually been looking for powered speakers myself too.
I thought, at first, that the Sony wasn't as good, but I think it was volume or conversion. After using both for a while, they seemed similar in quality.
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mwillems, thanks for the link.
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I've modified some links above. They use JRiver's tag at Amazon so we benefit a little from any purchases.
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PLEASE look into the Canto powered speakers. They have multiple connectivity options. Ive seen them on serious sale recently.
These are the best bang-for-buck speakers I have heard period.
-Patrick
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Canton? Which ones?
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I like the little m-audio powered speakers for tight places. The audioengine ones are supposed to be very nice. I'd get either over a lepai. Not that I hate my lepai but I totally hate it.
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Sorry..... typo.
Kanto (http://www.amazon.com/Kanto-YUMIBLK-Bookshelf-Bluetooth-Technology/dp/B00AMAJG94/&tag=wwwjrmediacen-20)
They are nice at $400. An absolute steal for under $300.
Bluetooth in, analog in, optical in, minijack in. Remote.
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Sorry..... typo.
Kanto.
http://www.amazon.com/Kanto-YUMIBLK-Bookshelf-Bluetooth-Technology/dp/B00AMAJG94
They are nice at $400. An absolute steal for under $300.
Bluetooth in, analog in, optical in, minijack in. Remote.
Now those are just cool.....no matter who you are. Sub out too... what a great gift idea (to self even).
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Sorry..... typo.
Kanto.
http://www.amazon.com/Kanto-YUMIBLK-Bookshelf-Bluetooth-Technology/dp/B00AMAJG94
They are nice at $400. An absolute steal for under $300.
Bluetooth in, analog in, optical in, minijack in. Remote.
Yeh, they ARE nice, except that shipping and handling + taxes add 112 EUROS! Darn it and I can't find them here.
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I should note that they sound amazing at the price point. Regardless of the connectivity they are decent powered speakers.
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I like the little m-audio powered speakers for tight places. The audioengine ones are supposed to be very nice. I'd get either over a lepai. Not that I hate my lepai but I totally hate it.
Agreed. I can't tell you if they're 'golden ear' quality, but I've been very happy with my M-Audio speakers (http://www.amazon.com/M-Audio-Studiophile-Active-Monitor-Speakers/dp/B0051WAM64//&tag=wwwjrmediacen-20) for $150. Solid cabinet construction, though the inputs are a little cheap.
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I should note that they sound amazing at the price point. Regardless of the connectivity they are decent powered speakers.
You know what the heck. I took the plunge and ordered them.
My current pc speaker set was 45 euros and its 15 years old :P. It's so worn out now everything sounds like a fart :P.
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We like our Audioengine A5's too.
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I didn't need the Kantos but I totally bought them. 2nd day shipping for free! Love Amazon Prime. At least until the last of the local stores have closed.
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You know what the heck. I took the plunge and ordered them.
My current pc speaker set was 45 euros and its 15 years old :P. It's so worn out now everything sounds like a fart :P.
Cool!!! I think you will be very pleased.
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The JRiver Id works well when you have a sound system or DAC you want to play to, but I've got a couple of situations (bedroom and garage) where I don't have anything to amplify the sound. So I'm looking for some good powered speakers. I'm willing to spend about $200 or $300.
In this thread, I'm going to keep notes on speakers I've tried.
At $400 maybe a bit outside of the price range, but if looking for accuracy, relatively speaking, these are a good value: http://www.behringer.com/EN/Products/B2031A.aspx
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Very happy with Audioengine A2.
Have just noticed they now have the A2+ which has USB input as well
Cheers
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I didn't need the Kantos but I totally bought them. 2nd day shipping for free! Love Amazon Prime. At least until the last of the local stores have closed.
$194 for the red gloss ones, btw. Depending on color they went for as much as $384.
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SWEET! Red is even less than Black right now. Let us know what you think.
-Patrick
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They're quite nice. They're quite red. Nicely finished. Heavy. They look the business.
Sound wise I'm happy. Most people would be happy with these. And when my hearing gets worse I might sell SpeakerHenge and put something like this in its place. Hard to have a great feel for their sound since they are two feet apart, on the floor and in the middle of the room. Still, they're good.
It has two USB charging ports but I don't think it can charge my ipad. Seems fine with my iphone.
As an aside: I wish anything on iOS, outside of a music player, would let you dump out to blutooth. Even so I think I'll run my ipad guitar apps through this. Amplitude, garage band, and rock prodigy all work great through this.
As an additional aside: If anyone has tried Rock Prodigy before and thought it was pretty limited it has gotten way better. They have included the instruction videos (rather than sending you to youtube) and have broken things out even more than before. So you can learn a song in pieces. Lessons are better organized and there are more practice bits. Plus it uses the nice and easy side scrolling tab which my brain likes a lot better when I'm trying to learn. All that said if my laptop had the HP to run Rock Smith I would probably use that since a couple of the amps in that sound amazing.
And I'm out of play time.
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Great to hear.
Get them up some stands or something and the same distance apart as you sit from them. They should get even better.
Cheers!
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Aargh! My Kanto's should have been delivered yesterday. In fact, the guy was at the door. I was home. Window was open, people talking, some music playing. He must have heard that but he just left a note that I wasn't home. I doubt if he even rang the bell. I was home! &*^%^%$!
Oh well, I can pick them up at a DHL depot this afternoon when I come home from work.
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Same that the Sony but better?
The soundlink II Bose
http://www.lesnumeriques.com/enceintes-portables/bose-soundlink-ii-p14500/test.html (http://www.lesnumeriques.com/enceintes-portables/bose-soundlink-ii-p14500/test.html)
This one is also amazing
http://www.lesnumeriques.com/enceintes-portables/bose-soundlink-mini-p16894/test.html#resume (http://www.lesnumeriques.com/enceintes-portables/bose-soundlink-mini-p16894/test.html#resume)
I don't work for Bose, one of my collegue have it and i'm pretty impressed.
Nevertheless, i'm not sure about the connections, it is at least bluetooh
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Same that the Sony but better?
The soundlink II Bose http://www.lesnumeriques.com/enceintes-portables/bose-soundlink-ii-p14500/test.html (http://www.lesnumeriques.com/enceintes-portables/bose-soundlink-ii-p14500/test.html)
This one is also amazing http://www.lesnumeriques.com/enceintes-portables/bose-soundlink-mini-p16894/test.html#resume (http://www.lesnumeriques.com/enceintes-portables/bose-soundlink-mini-p16894/test.html#resume)
I don't work for Bose, one of my collegue have it and i'm pretty impressed.
Nevertheless, i'm not sure about the connections, it is at least bluetooh
For what it's worth, the SoundLink II has been replaced with the SoundLink III (http://www.lesnumeriques.com/enceintes-portables/bose-soundlink-iii-soundlink-3-p19421/test.html) now.
The Bose devices only connect via Bluetooth though, and both use rear-firing bass radiators which is not ideal if they'll be placed on a shelf, as you might do when using them in your home.
Bluetooth restricts your range, and means that you have to be tethered to a device, so it's not ideal for home audio.
And for home audio connected to Media Server, I would want playback controls on the device.
Bluetooth connected speakers usually skip these, as it's assumed that they will be tethered to your phone for control.
Even if I did carry a smartphone on me at all times, I just don't like using apps for things like skipping a track. It takes far too long to unlock the device, load the app, select the right zone, and then skip vs pressing a button on the speaker.
The Bose speakers are supposed to be very good for their intended purpose - a portable speaker - but I would not expect high fidelity audio from them.
I keep meaning to check out the SoundLink Mini, I always hear people saying good things about that for its size.
If I was buying something in that class, it would probably be between the SoundLink Mini and Fugoo Tough (http://www.fugoo.com/fugoo-tough/) based on what I've heard about them.
I like the fact that the Fugoo Tough is ruggedized (aluminum enclosure, IP67 rated) and is probably the smallest speaker which includes tweeters. Even most of the large speakers only focus on mid-range and bass.
Logitech and JBL are worth checking out too. We have one of the old JBL portable speakers (before bluetooth speakers were a thing) and one of the UE Boom Minis, and both sound very good relative to their size/price.
I don't know whether that value continues as you move up the range. With JBL being a speaker company, I would expect most of their products to be quite good - I just don't know many people that have used them.
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Aargh! My Kanto's should have been delivered yesterday. In fact, the guy was at the door. I was home. Window was open, people talking, some music playing. He must have heard that but he just left a note that I wasn't home. I doubt if he even rang the bell. I was home! &*^%^%$!
Oh well, I can pick them up at a DHL depot this afternoon when I come home from work.
So I picked them up today. I won't turn around the bush, they are not as good as I expected them to be. They lack in midrange and quickly get annoying (a bit messy) when played louder. I suppose I expected them to be more musical. To me they seem great for gaming and such.
That's not to say they are bad, they are not. There's great detail, bass is good for their size too. I just think for the money that I paid (412 dollars, including shipping/tax/import fees) there should be something better out there.
I really like the connection options and bluetooth works great with the phones, tablet and laptop too.
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They don't have a huge sweet spot and distance from the wall seems kind of important. Sorry they didn't work out. At $400 I don't know if I would be happy. At the $194 I paid I certainly am.
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They are decent enough, I just expected a little more that's all.
I'll see if I can play with placement some although my options are limited. I don't have a lot of space on my desk.
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Sorry you are not totally stoked.
I can say, I have tried many powered and portable systems. I use a Big Jambox for portable. For powered speakers there are better out there than Kanto. Fostex comes to mind. But I haven't heard anything under $400 that compares.
The limitations you mention are par for the course on small, inexpensive, powered speakers.
You could spend $400 on some average loudspeakers, but then you need a amplification, cables, more space, a tethered source, etc.
I hope the bed in well for you.
Good luck.
Patrick
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It's much better now. I changed 2 things.
I still had to bypass pulseaudio for the Xonar ST so as to give MC direct and exclusive access to the sound card. I had already done that some time ago but that was for another device. Pulse was causing it to sound a bit muffled.
Second I raised them from the desk with a small stand. This improves things massively. Placing them flat on a desk is apparently NOT a good idea - much more than I imagined it would.
Still a bit annoying when played at louder volumes, but not nearly as bad as before.
It's actually quite good like this :D.
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I Find the Sony SRS-X7 work fine with DLNA on Version 19.0.149
the latest MC version as of today 07-16-2014 Media Center 19.0.152
has some major issues with DLNA and broke just about everything DLNA wise
The only issues with my SRS-X7 is a power saving / sleep issue in which I addressed in another thread
as well as falling to the floor twice as it walked itself off of the table.
Is it a awesome speaker no. Is it a nice speaker that sounds decent for its size that can stream DLNA yes
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Another set of speakers that work with MC is the gear from Grace Digital
https://gracedigital.com/internet-radio/
they do have some quirks though
If you use both remote control through webGizmo and the Grace Digital interface the units seem to get confused after a while
but if you just use DLNA remotely or the local interface and or remote locally all seems to be fine
Another set of equipment for the Prosumer are the following from CambridgeAudio
http://www.cambridgeaudio.com/products/stream-magic-6-v2-upsampling-network-music-player-pre-amplifier
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So Jim, have you been able to find something to your liking?