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Phil Starr last won the day on November 10 2025
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I've just stumbled upon this and it might interest people looking for a new mixer. I stress that I've not seen one yet or tried it out but it looks like a really useful addition to what is available and has a very different approach to what is already available. It skips on the touch screen and everything is 'physical' controls; note the parenthesis. You can control it with an app but that is via bluetooth not via a router. To me it is set up for live work more than a studio it only seems to allow two channel recording and it has a very physical, practical set of facilities. Andertons have it in for £499 So basically it is a 12/16 channel mixer with 10 XLR/mixed inputs and a couple of stereo inputs, standard stuff. Four main outputs, four submix outputs and three Aux outs. Mixing is via 6 capacitative touch faders, effectively a separate touch screen for each channel, No more problems with dirt in the faders I suppose. Faders are arranged in two banks Everything else is accessed by touch switches and rotary knobs at the side of the screen, which is not touch sensitive it is just a display. Eq is fully parametric with three bands and HPF on every channel. Compression is available on each channel as is phantom power FX is a comprehensive collection of reverb and delay, again with all the parameters adjustable by the rotary controls. To me the facilities are pretty much all you need for a typical pub band and very similar to the offering I have on my RCF mixer. This is going to be much less flexible than the Behringer X18's but so much more intuitive than any of the current stagebox mixers. The use of physical switches and rotaries is going to be completely comfortable for anyone who has used an analogue mixer and much better/simpler for anyone mixing from on stage. All the channel fx are available with one click and completely flexible, you can do as little or as much as you want. I have to say that this might be a game changer for many bands, physical controls are so much simpler when you are also playing. Alto have clearly looked hard at the shortcomings of other budget mixers and this looks to have come up with fixes that make sense. I've no idea of the build quality or long term reliability of all those knobs and buttons but Alto have been producing reliable and well loved speakers for a while so no reason to doubt them. I haven't found a manual yet so there are many questions I couldn't answer, primarily if you can save scenes and waht is on the app but this looks promising
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Hi David, the truth is I haven't tried it yet. I'm not really big on recording other than laying down some bass lines so my duo partner can do solo gigs without me. We've been busy together over Christmas and we have a couple of gigs this month so nothing has been pressing. We've also had a lot of guests staying over the festive perion but the last one left this morning. I'll try something as soon as I get time and let you know. Everything else about the Flow 8 is better than my old Alesis so I'm expecting it should be OK in that area but the proof is in the eating. We will see
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It's always interesting to look at specs but I don't thnk you can reliably compare between brands. Firstly the power ratings are for the amps not the speakers. You can put a 2,000W amp into a speaker but if the power is then managed by DSP then the speaker is protected from that power ever reaching the speaker. There really aren't many 15" speakers that can handle anything like that sort of power. To do that over long periods you need plenty of coil area to dissipate the heat so bigger voice coils are needed. Reckon 4-600W for a 3" voice coil and 600-1,000 for a 4" voice coil. Typically sensitivity of a mid priced 15" speaker with a 4" voice coil will be arond 96db /W so at 1,000w that is 126db maximum output. Looking at the RCF drivers they are over quoting by 6db at least, I know this because they also sell the speakers as bare drive units. At one point Yamaha were over quoting by 9db. I wouldn't even like to say from your pdf which of those speakers would be the loudest in practice. Be careful about basing your decision upon specs. It would be great if you could try those 12" EV's. It's so hard to get to listen to any of this gear even in London. it might be worth trying some of the DJ dealers but borrowing gear is always better as you can set it up the way you want. As to reviews: most people are in love with the kit they just bought, will highly recommend it but mysteriously upgrade a year later . It's all a bit of a leap in the dark. Having said that none of these brands are making bad kit, RCF and Yamaha are at the top of their game I've probably been looking at the same on line reviews of the lates offerings from EV and they are looking good. I just haven't heard their latest stuff live yet so I've no opinion. I wasn't really recommending the RCF 905 btw. I was just trying to answer your two 12's or one 15 question. I have the 905, its a good sub but i have no idea if something else would be better/as good.
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I can't answer that it all depends upon where you are going to use them and how they are used. There's no reason why they shouldn't sound the same at low sound levels. However making loud bass is af everything else is equal question of shifting lots of air and a big piston will outperform a little one if everything else is equal. Thats about cone area so you can work it out . Roughly thats 250cm^2 for an 8, 530 for a 12 and 850 for a 15. That's comparing like with like. The rcf 702 gives 129db, the 705 gives 131db and the 905 133db in their spec sheets. You'd have to decide for yourself whether the extra 2db or 4db would be needed. Remembering also that 2x 12" 702's are £1470 and 1x 905 is £1150. The 12's weigh in at 42kg and the 905 at 31kg so tht is a factor too. I doubt that in practice a single 12" sub would outperform the 12" speakers in your ART 932's, so I think only a pair of 12's make sense
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So Santa brought me one of these little mixers. I've a little Alesis mixer that sits on my desk to drive my studio monitors and practice headphones. It has USB and I've used it as an interface but the quality is just not great, it's noisy and the mic pre's are really quite poor. Some of the pots need a clean too. So initial impressions: It is nicely made, solid case and all the pots are smooth with a nice feel, everything works as it should. Set up took a time, the handbook isn't much help and the only video's I found on YouTube weren't much help either. In the end once you've downloaded the drivers and the Flow app it starts to work. My iPhone worked out of the box but the IPad didn't recognise the mixer for a while and the windows desktop needed extra downloads. The bluetooth conections were problemmatic as most people have reported. It took me a couple of hours to get everything working as it should. The Alesis just kicked itself into action years ago but it's mainly analogue. The mic pre's are nice, at tleast on the two dedicated mic channels. It does have high impedance inputs ( I should have read the manual before asking Santa) on channels 6 and 8 so may do as a backup for my duo. The bluetooth is a problem, it took a while to pair the control app (the playback connection was better behaved) but playing bluetooth through the Flow 8 shows just how poor the sound is, very lacking in bass and over bright at the top. Playing music through the USB port though is great. Hopefully the D/A works well in both directions. The app control is pretty crude compared with my band mixer. Workflow is simple enough but the options limited and I've spent a lot of time pressing odd bits of the screen to find out how to unlock the next screen, there isn't a lot of consistency when switching screens. It's an odd little beast really, you can only access basic operations from the controls on the mixer and the fx are really modest compared with a 'proper' digital mixer. However there are physical sliders, Channel eq is better than most analogue mixers, you do have at least two decent mic pre's and all the basic functions I need are available to me including recording multiple channels onto a DAW rather than just the two I had available previously. All this in a tiny footprint and at a pretty tiny price. I'll do a proper review once I've used this for a couple of months
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Hi Al, I wouldn't worry about this, though as ever real world experience counts for a lot so I'd always respect anyone who has tried both. I think in your position you need to be looking for quality and practicality, you have great tops so don't cut corners with your sub(s). From the looks of your videos your band should make decent money so cost shouldn't be too much of an issue. I have a pair of Wharfedale EVP 15" subs. Old, heavy and reliable but they onle get used once a year on average. In smaller venues they are a liability, sonically and space wise. Last year I picked up a nearly new RCF 905 AS Mk3 and its rated output matches that of the pair of Wharfedales. I've done small outdoor festivals with those so that's as capable as I'll ever want to be. Indoors I don't think I'll ever need more. A mates soul/funk function band are going round with a pair of 2x8 FBT subs and they sound great so size isn't everything especially with that sort of music, which is close to that which you and I play. I'll add a second 905 probably if I see one going cheap but that will be for the look and the odd outdoor gig. I don't think I'll ever need it but is would give me the opportunity to run cardioid subs, if I ever get the space to set that up. I don't think you'll ever need it but you could run with a single decent 15" sub for quite a while and then judge if you need a second. Your tops are rated 133db and the AS905's are rated the same you could go to the RCF8003's which are rated 135db to match both your tops with a single cab but at the expense of a 43kg lift and an extra £500. That's the same as my Wharfedales and they are quite a carry, one of the main reasons I upgraded. So the only reason for going for 2x12's is to get the 'look' of a sub each side and a lighter carry. The look is important to a function band though. A pair of 12's is going to give you plenty of output but so is a 15 of the same quality. It's going to cost you more and may or may not be more convenient to transport. Basically I'm saying don't base your choice on speaker size. Look at the spec's but be very sceptical of them, the specs are advertising not technical measurements in most cases but they help within a brand for comparisons. Each brand exaggerates but by a fixed amount. Look at functionality, quality gear from the likes of RCF, FBT and Yamaha aren't going to let you down.
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2x10 Build - couple of questions and driver recommendations?
Phil Starr replied to doninphi's topic in Amps and Cabs
It's probably worth knowing that Celestion measure their Xmax differently to most other manufacturers so the 'true' level of excursion for comparison with other brands will be something comfortably above the 4mm they quote. Xmax isn't a hard limit, the speaker will go on producing an output without endangering itself beyond Xmax. The magnetic field extends beyond the magnet but weakens as you get further from the magnet. For the speaker this mens that the speaker begins to struggle to follow the signal accurately and it starts to distort. Xmax is an attempt to put a number on the linear part of the speaker's output. At the frequencies we are talking about, below 100Hz, you probably wouldn't notice 10% distortion. The old fashioned and harshest way of measuring Xmax is just to measure the voice coil and magnet gap; 16mm and 8mm in the case of this Celestion. That leaves 8mm of movement with the coil inside the complete 8mm gap and Xmax of 4mm each way. The other ways of quoting Xmax are to measure it at a specified distortion (often 10%) or to do a 'predicted' Xmax based upon the speaker's geometry, adding a bit of extra Xmax to allow for the extra bit of magnetic field beyond the gap. Both these figures will add excursion and to be fair will reflect real world behaviour. You can guess that marketing prefer a bigger figure. 18-Sound don't have details of how their Xmax is measured on the data sheet but I supect it is calculated with a bit extra and more generously rated than Celestions. -
Well Santa brought me the set of ‘Holmer’ nut files. I’ll practice on some suitable material before risking my real nuts😅
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happy christmas to you too Rob
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I'm really sorry to hear that too. I hope she recovers quickly.
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We will have to agree to differ on this Bill. You can see the frequency irregularities around the crossover point in pretty much any frequency plot I've ever seen or measured and the irregularities are audible as well as measurable. Without wanting to get into a philosophical debate about the nature of reality IMO if something is measurable and audible it is real. There's no doubt the software is getting better and will get better still but again IMO it isn't there yet. The measured plots still don't exactly match the computer's modelled responses and most of the big designers are going to use the software to get in the ball park and still use iterative measurements to check and hone their designs. Again I suppose it depends upon what you mean by "an exact result" it may be good enough but I'm a scientist not an engineer so exact is a very big statement.
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It's looking really good Rob, don't do yourself down. There are two issues with the grille. You need to keep it flat and not let it rattle and then it needs to be removable for any maintenance. If the back is stuck on then the speaker hole is the only way back in. It's fairly conventional to use either velcro or the little neo magnets to hold something to the speaker. I'm not sure how well the magnets would work to just hold the grille rigidly in place. If you drop the speakr or somebody kicks it then it will get pushed towards the speaker it is meant to be protecting. I cerainly don't think just magnets in the corners would be enough, and would it rattle at higher sound levels. I'd probably want the grille screwed to a frame which supports the grille along the whole length. Use the magnets to fix the frame to the baffle. Or you could print some sort of peg system to lock the frame to the baffle.
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You cut up the car! 🤣 Try using a bit of timber or hard plastic to concentrate the forces. You can then concentrate on the actually bent bits.
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That's a great question and what your measurements have uncovered is one of the problems that have cursed speaker design generally and crossover design in particular since they were invented. If not really a secret it is something buried inside any speaker with different speakers handling different parts of the frequency spectrum. It's approaching impossible to have the two speakers in phase at the crossover point and it is practically extremely difficult with a passive crossover to get the roll off of each speaker to be symmetrical. Inductors and capacitors induce their own phase shifts too so time alignment of two speakers at crossover is still really difficult. https://www.learnabout-electronics.org/ac_theory/ac_ccts_51.php Bill has pointed you to the Altec "Voice Of The Theatre" A7 which is a really interesting design. Large installed systems of the time frequently had horns mounted on a sled. Active crossovers and DSP allow delay to be brought into the crossovers hence the rash of 'Firphase' into PA speakers, this is the problem it is addressing. Practically then you can pretty much always see a frequency anomoly at crossover. the designer has the choice of a blip or a dip and crossover distortion is audible in critical listening tests. Usually it shows up quite clearly and affects female voices in particular. We are really sensitive to any change in voices and the frequency of crssover is usually well within the range of female voices. Practically a dip at crossover is usually less obtrusive than a blip. Try reversing the wiring and you should see a change in your measurements and hear differences in voices and instruments in that area. Acoustic guitar often changes too but I use classical music for testing this sort of thing. Even tiny changes in a crossover can make an instrument pop out in a recording. You can choose your distortion mostly I prefer the dip. @stevie is the expert in this and the detail he goes into with his crossovers is extraordinary. It's really worth getting hold of a copy of the Loudspeaker Design Cookbook by Vance Dickason if you want to read up on all this, and much more.
