• If you haven't done so already, please add a location to your profile. This helps when people are trying to assist you, suggest resources, etc. Thanks (Click the "X" to the top right of this message to disable it)

FR3x amplification at home

Status
Not open for further replies.

xocd

Active member
Joined
Mar 31, 2017
Messages
169
Reaction score
109
Location
Somerville, MA
Do you have a recommendation for an external amplifier/speaker to play an FR3x at home?. I.e., I do not need to fill a big hall. I do like good fidelity.

I find that I like the sound of the FR3x best when I turn off the on-board amplifier/speaker. Also, I prefer an external amplifier/speaker to headphones. (Though the FR3x sounds great via headphones but one needs headphones with high sensitivity. Bose sound-cancelling headphones seem to work well.)

I tried a Roland CUBE 80x, a guitar amplifier with a "clean" mode. This sounds OK, but it's very hissy and the headphones have better detail

I have also tried a small amplifier with a pair of bookshelf speakers: no hiss, OK detail, but not a lot of bass. Also, rube-goldbergy and hard to move around.

Ideally I would like to find a powered speaker, or keyboard amp, with good sound (no hiss, good detail) that does not need to be very powerful (cheap too :D ). Your feedback is much appreciated.

Thanks!
 
xocd post_id=59576 time=1527623317 user_id=2246 said:
Do you have a recommendation for an external amplifier/speaker to play an FR3x at home?. I.e., I do not need to fill a big hall. I do like good fidelity.
I am sorry to say that with accordion, good fidelity particularly with orchestral patches and even drums implies a good bass response. Which in turn implies moving significant amounts of air and that creates minimum sizes for the bass speakers.

I have a Solton Leslie-style keyboard amp (which has a 12 bass speaker and about 100W). This thing is fun. Particularly when using orchestral basses and/or drums, or organ patches (from a Midi expander or the computer rather than my small Roland FR-1b itself) or even the lower basses among the accordion patches (Alpine, for example).

For proofhearing, I use Philips MFB RH-541 active HiFi boxes. 1970s technology, 30W of power. Their motion feedback technology gives them a precise lower range at small size but you would not want to use them as PA (and/or turn them up to fun level) since they are providing their good low response by compensating for nonlinearities at the limits of the speakers capabilities.

I have been using a small Chinese soundbar to practice when people are asleep, and I used a Teufel Bamster PC (which is smaller but heavier and, as opposed to the Bamster BT model, needs to be powered by computer or USB power brick). Either have about 2×3W of power (realistically) and start around 100Hz so forget about realistic bass response. For accordion bass, proofhearing remains astonishingly workable but if you were to use some instruments with low overtone content (wind pipes for organ are about the worst) the bass voice is just absent. On the other hand, at night you actually want the bass frequencies to be mostly absent since they go through walls and floors best.

Sound quality is a bit of a tossup. For night practice, probably the Chinese bar is better since the Teufel is built in a manner where it actually couples pretty well into the table it is standing on, compensating somewhat impredictably for its small speaker membranes.

Note that the soundbars are strictly for I want to hear what I am playing, nobody else needs to hear, and a headphone is too uncomfortable scenarios. They are less crappy than built-in laptop speakers (well, at least my laptop speakers) but thats basically it. Ive actually used laptop speakers for practice as well but they are mostly useless for hearing the bass regardless of registration.

I suspect that the presence of builtin amps and speakers on the FR-3x would mean that my more minimalistic solutions are entirely without appeal for your use.
I tried a Roland CUBE 80x, a guitar amplifier with a clean mode. This sounds OK, but its very hissy and the headphones have better detail
Hissy? Used the audio outputs of the FR3x and turned them up? The levels should actually be good enough in comparison with a guitar pickup. Detail: no question about that. Guitar amps are not keyboard amps, they have limited frequency response either way.
I have also tried a small amplifier with a pair of bookshelf speakers: no hiss, OK detail, but not a lot of bass.
Probably already significantly better than my soundbars.
Ideally I would like to find a powered speaker, or keyboard amp, with good sound (no hiss, good detail) that does not need to be very powerful (cheap too :D ). Your feedback is much appreciated.
Well, the old Philips MFB are not very powerful and have excellent detail. Since I use them with a mixer, I am not quite sure that the Roland levels are sufficient for driving them (I think that something like 0.7V is their highest sensitivity setting).

Ive also used a sound base for reasonable results (bought it broken and repaired it) but it was way larger than I imagined it to be and thus is not really much of an alternative for lugging around.

The soundbars set me off by about €25 a piece (and much more would be a waste of money I think which places the Teufel Bamster BT outside of my experimentation range), the sound base would have been around €50 if not broken, the MFB speaker pair came for something like €100 and the Solton Turbojet Leslie clone moved for a similar sum (though I probably was lucky with that).

Most of that not actual musicians gear.
 
You can actually get surprisingly good STEREO sound from a (not cheap, but very reasonably priced) set of 3-way computer speakers.

I show my two portable setups on my blog/website... one more portable (and stereo) than the other. IMHO, for home use, you are not going to find a much better setup without spending more.

Look about mid-article, at the Phase II, the smaller setup section. :)

http://www.AccordionMemories.com/portable/

Enjoy!
 
it is about how much you want to spend.Just stay away from apartment store speakers. I never had a problem ?with my accordion speakers, i would think FR4x same type. Even strolling performance, i use the accordion speakers. something i would try is that Mackie Freeplay. Probably buy it to try or demo at a store. they always are returnable if not satisfied within a short period.
https://www.sweetwater.com/store/de..._vykd_R1YEaDm4uwgU9KVfw01K8RYfosaAqcREALw_wcB
 
JerryPH post_id=59585 time=1527633881 user_id=1475 said:
I love Sweetwater, a man could spend a ridiculously silly amount of money there! :lol:

Sweetwater, a no brainer. 48 month no interest at times. Entices you to buy more. A reputable store that takes returns is what I always look for, which most chains do. Although, special orders like FR4x, non returnable, when not a stock item. But the facilities is huge with cafeteria, game room, etc. for employees. A store I would work at if needed a job. I buy from them all the time but do not like there own brand audio cable line.

But some may think a unit as small as Free Play will not do the job. I think so because I have. Behringer similar, but over ten years old and half the power. Does a reasonable good job. Great when working at a senior home. But I usually need it just for mic. Accordion is always loud enough.
 
JerryPH post_id=59583 time=1527629520 user_id=1475 said:
You can actually get surprisingly good STEREO sound from a (not cheap, but very reasonably priced) set of 3-way computer speakers.

I show my two portable setups on my blog/website... one more portable (and stereo) than the other. IMHO, for home use, you are not going to find a much better setup without spending more.

Look about mid-article, at the Phase II, the smaller setup section. :)

http://www.AccordionMemories.com/portable/

Enjoy!
And if you have an audio interface, plug it in computer DAW, process the signal anyway you want to sound good through the computer speakers.
 
(OP here)

Thanks for all the recommendations. One thing I forgot to say is that I am currently using only the accordion sounds.
 
I recently was on a quest for this myself (for a normal accordion), and I tested several amps/powered speaker systems for live backline / monitoring, Fender, Fishman, Maui, Bose, AER but I ended up with the Acus 8 (which is an offspring of Schertler). If you use it strictly in the living room they have smaller ones as well.

The sound quality is superb in my ears.

Because of its tilt-feature you can sit it on the ground and point it up to yourself, which bathes you in your own sound. I opted for the 200W version especially for this, it has punch at lower volume.
 
There is one thing I need to add to this...
I guess I do not understand what you are looking for in a home environment?
It seems you trying to duplicate what you hear on your headphones!
Maybe The accordion itself may not be setup properly in the settings to your liking?
It is not the amp power or speakers but the mix and EQ. A 200 watt /1000watt does not mean a thing without the proper mixer settings.
If you think about it, look at the size and power watts of the fr8x/fr4x/Fr3x speakers, It is minimal. Look what comes out!
I would think home stereo would be plenty. Soundbar with a sub!
If in living room, plenty sound.
I would even experiment plugging into iPad or IPhone. They sell audio plugin adapters. Then Bluetooth to your home stereo.
Some of those apps have mixers, etc. on your iPad/ iPhone to use.
 
Keymn post_id=59686 time=1527925854 user_id=2502 said:
It is not the amp power or speakers but the mix and EQ. A 200 watt /1000watt does not mean a thing without the proper mixer settings.

It is not a matter of power, but a matter of quality. The Roland Cube 80x can play loud enough but it has a background hiss which is always there no matter what you are trying to play through it. My home setup has the quality and power that I want, but its tethered to my living room. I would like to find a portable solution, perhaps not as nice as the home stereo, but better than the Cube 80x. From reading through the forum perhaps a powered speaker like the QSC K8.2 or K10.2 is something I should check.
 
xocd post_id=59701 time=1527973321 user_id=2246 said:
Keymn post_id=59686 time=1527925854 user_id=2502 said:
It is not the amp power or speakers but the mix and EQ. A 200 watt /1000watt does not mean a thing without the proper mixer settings.

It is not a matter of power, but a matter of quality. The Roland Cube 80x can play loud enough but it has a background hiss which is always there no matter what you are trying to play through it. My home setup has the quality and power that I want, but its tethered to my living room. I would like to find a portable solution, perhaps not as nice as the home stereo, but better than the Cube 80x. From reading through the forum perhaps a powered speaker like the QSC K8.2 or K10.2 is something I should check.
I have the QSC12, last model. Good, but think new models have an EQ or better quality preamp. It is super quiet, But pricy. I think an 8 or a 10 would be perfect for gigs up to 100 people. On my senior home gigs, I just bring my speaker, plug in the back. Set it at 50% gain. New model has 2000 watt verses 1000Watts. Wow, must be really clean!
Still curious about Mackie Freeplay mentioned above. Would be nice to try that one first. Think $300.00 ?
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top