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...I was placed next to a giant immovable trip-hammer made in 1895 in Boston and if I leaned down behind my FOH EQ I would cover my arm (again) in a century's worth of metal dust and cutting oil... ...(Another weird thing about FOH position is that there were bottles of scary liquids on a shelf right above the laptops. Things labeled "Liver of Sulphur". "Copper Sulphate" and "15% Nitric Acid." Love those metal shop guys.)... |
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...I wonder if all those Jerry Coles hand tools jingled and rattled during acts... |
Michael 'Bink' Knowles wrote on Sun, 11 February 2007 04:02 |
Another weird thing about FOH position is that there were bottles of scary liquids on a shelf right above the laptops. Things labeled "Liver of Sulphur". "Copper Sulphate" and "15% Nitric Acid." Love those metal shop guys. |
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...I'd never have thought to use that "other" angle!... |
Michael 'Bink' Knowles wrote on Mon, 12 February 2007 22:23 |
Go ahead, laugh. My carload of speakers can kick your carload of speakers's butt. -Bink |
Ales Dravinec 'Alex' wrote on Thu, 15 February 2007 12:37 |
to make front row spectators happy...I don't have to mention, who those people usually are... Alex |
Tony Tissot wrote on Fri, 16 February 2007 16:48 | ||
? Buttheads? For being willing to pay way too much? |
Lee Brenkman wrote on Sat, 17 February 2007 12:09 |
And the most important people down in the "front lines" Big burly security guys! |
Lee Brenkman wrote on Tue, 20 February 2007 21:32 |
Really glad they survived the Techno party. |
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...shame you didn't have the EONA 618 at your disposal. To the 118, it's like comparing mini van to a semi truck... |
Michael 'Bink' Knowles wrote on Wed, 21 February 2007 13:22 |
Pascal's probably more interested in how the 618 compares to the Trip which he does have in inventory. If there's a turntablist at the event you typically want to keep excessive LF energy off the platters so the needles don't jump out of the groove. What has more LF directionality: two Trip12s or two ATA618Cs? |
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I'm in agreement with Bink though about how the tops and subs combine: there seemed to be a bit too much mid-bass, and the sub energy felt a bit boomy. |
Mike Pyle wrote on Sun, 25 February 2007 10:57 |
Bink will be bringing some of the ADRaudio rig over to my monthly swing dance in Oakland tonight. If anyone in the area wants to give these a listen, give me a call today and I'll put your name on the guest list. This is a DJ gig with a wide variety of musical genre in a fair sized historic dancehall. We plan to set the U103s up alongside some RCF ART322As I often use for comparison, and use the ADRaudio sub. Address is the Lake Merritt Veteran's Hall at 200 Grand Avenue in Oakland, CA. That's the corner of Grand and Harrison. We'll have music playing from 6:30pm - 10:ish in the main ballroom, Sunday 2/25/2007. My number is 707-315-6204. Call before 6:00pm if you can, otherwise I'll be occupied. |
Ales Dravinec 'Alex' wrote on Mon, 26 February 2007 10:57 |
... 'where' did you chose to LP the ATA118 ? 'subby' or 'bangy'? |
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...After listening to some music through them for a while I found that they were a little harsh in the upper range. After discussing it with Bennett, and he did some tests of his own, he and Alex sent me a modification to the PEQ board. I did the mod and it resulted in smoother highs and better mid range punch... |
Michael 'Bink' Knowles wrote on Tue, 27 February 2007 18:50 |
...The way I heard it, the mod you performed wasn't exactly a product modification, it was an early production run QC burp that you corrected. Now that your tops are 'modded' they are actually returned to 'standard.'... -Bink |
Lee Brenkman wrote on Sat, 17 March 2007 01:04 |
The only "tech note" here is that the plastic feet slide around REAL easily on nicely polished hardwood stages. Something a little more rubbery might be more in order for the wedges. |
Michael 'Bink' Knowles wrote on Sat, 17 March 2007 10:53 |
I bet that without subs there you didn't HPF the U103s--just let them run native. |
Scott Waldy wrote on Fri, 20 July 2007 18:39 |
Wish me luck. |
Ales Dravinec 'Alex' wrote on Fri, 20 July 2007 15:26 |
...coupled 118s... |
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FOH was a A&H Mixwiz 16:3, a dbx 1231 and the Behringer DCX2496. For the first time I decided to run the subs-on-an-aux. I set the low & high pass filters @ 100Hz / 12db BW slope. |
Aaron McQueen wrote on Sun, 22 July 2007 22:33 |
On the next gig try taking the DCX2496 out. The subs and tops are already crossed, and have built in eq and limiting (all analog processing). Run them into limiters and they still sound good. |
Michael 'Bink' Knowles wrote on Sun, 22 July 2007 22:11 |
Cool! Nice to hear you had a good show. Not surprising, actually. How many peeps showed up? The thing I really like about the U103s is the LF and HF. The HF is stunningly clean for a compression driver hooked to a horn. Probably some voodoo/science going on in the phase plug to get it so crisp. The LF is pleasingly present all the way through its range without getting sloppy and unloaded at the extremes. I'd have a hard time choosing Meyer UPJ or ADRaudio U103 if there were some rider concerns but if it was just me choosing I'd go with U103. -Bink |
Phil LaDue wrote on Sat, 28 July 2007 13:14 |
I will be picking up a demo rig on Wednesday. |
Michael 'Bink' Knowles wrote on Sun, 22 July 2007 21:11 |
Cool! Nice to hear you had a good show. Not surprising, actually. How many peeps showed up? The thing I really like about the U103s is the LF and HF. The HF is stunningly clean for a compression driver hooked to a horn. Probably some voodoo/science going on in the phase plug to get it so crisp. The LF is pleasingly present all the way through its range without getting sloppy and unloaded at the extremes. I'd have a hard time choosing Meyer UPJ or ADRaudio U103 if there were some rider concerns but if it was just me choosing I'd go with U103. -Bink |
Scott Waldy wrote on Sat, 28 July 2007 15:18 | ||
Be prepared to be pleasantly surprised. |
"Grampa" wrote on Sun, 29 July 2007 19:30 |
...The last Stanford Jazz show for the year is this Saturday with saxophonist Lee Konitz. Cheers, "Grampa" |
Scott Waldy wrote |
...The mains(U 103) looked like toys... |
Ales Dravinec 'Alex' wrote on Thu, 02 August 2007 01:56 | ||
This particular feature comes in handy at the end of the usual show at 3AM-ish and gear needs to be disassembled and loaded into a truck, van, SUV,...All the energy has been consumed during the show...and 'roadies' are somehow not in sight... |
ThomasDameron wrote on Thu, 02 August 2007 04:34 |
That's great spin. Your marketing department should owe you a beer. |
Bennett Prescott wrote on Thu, 02 August 2007 06:30 | ||
So noted! Look for our new ad next month, "we fooled our roadies into loading the truck because they thought the PA was a toy" |
Phil LaDue wrote on Thu, 09 August 2007 14:12 |
Pictures coming tonight. |
Phil LaDue wrote on Thu, 09 August 2007 23:14 |
The aforementioned pictures can be found Here. Yes, they are water resistant too!! |
Jason Dermer wrote on Tue, 28 August 2007 15:41 |
Thanks to our good pal Bennett, I've been testing quite a bit of the Eona line over the past six months. Here are my down and dirty reviews, feel free to shoot me questions here or PM for more details... L 2821 HH line array I've had the pleasure of using eight of these boxes over two ATA 618Cs twice now, both times with excellent results. The first was indoors at the Lighthouse on Chelsea Piers in NYC, with a crowd of 450 at tables in an L shaped, 10,000 square foot room. The event was a benefit for World Hunger Year (shameless plug from a volunteer supervisor and tech coordinator ), and goes off very similarly to a corporate show. The boxes went up without a problem, the truck pack sized rolling carts that they transport on are ingenious and allow for very fast and easy setup. The boxes are unbelievably light, comparable in weight to a similarly sized unpowered box, while still feeling solid as a rock. The frequency response and coverage was even, and as with the rest of the EONA ADRaudio line, the only EQ needed was to correct room issues. The entertainment at this event was three different "A" list acts with 40+ Grammy, Academy, Emmy, and #1 single/album awards between them. One of the performers had their regular B.E. and M.E. with them, I mixed FOH and Bennett Prescott was on monitors for the other two. Although the band's engineers had not previously heard the EONA ADRaudio line, both walked away impressed and would have no issues if presented with the boxes again by a provider for a one off. (They normally contract a big name provider and carry all production). Once I got in the big chair, it was the same thing. The boxes basically disappeared, allowing me to mix without trying to work around what the rig was doing. One of the audience members came up to FOH and said it best: "Wow, it sounds like I am listening to the band acoustically in my living room." The second event was the Lollapajewza festival, held outdoors at the Stone Pony. Once again Bennett was my system tech, with moral and photographic support from Mike Butler. The weather forecast was rain and the skies were ominous, but since the show had already sold over the indoor capacity, we were asked to go with it regardless. Once again, the rig went up in no time flat. The first band sets up for soundcheck, we get them mic'd, and as I say kick, the skies take it as a cue to open up. FOH and the stage are covered so there are no real issues there, just shut her down, cut the power, and tarp the deck and everything on it. But the 2821s are in the air, and the 618s are on the ground. Me: "Bennett, should we drop the rig and cover them?" Bennett: "No, they'll be fine." So we move the show inside, (the crowd luckily was not that big yet) while Mother Nature lets loose with over 4" of rain in three hours. A tornado even touched down less than ten miles away! A few bands and a wrestling match later (long story) the rain subsided and the decision was made to go back outdoors. We quickly lowered the boxes, without unrigging, so that Bennett could make sure that no water had made it's way into the integral amps. No problem there, the rig goes back up, we power up and start over. There was NO ill effect whatsoever on the rig. The foam and grill combination used by Eona kept every bit of moisture out of the boxes, even in a driving rain coming off of the ocean, which in this location is only 400' away. We hacked our way through 6 or 7 really bad bands that even the Messiach could not have helped. Just as that point of "is it me?" started to set in, we got our first good band. Quick line check, and we're off and running. Without knowing their music, I was once again able to build a mix in no time flat. Good. Let's see what she'll do now. I start to push a bit, and I am able to hit 115dba at 70 feet with no problem. The boxes sound the same at high volume as they did at low, very smooth and natural, no distortion, great coverage in the pattern area. They compare favorably with other small, high end arrays- 4887, Mica, Y10, etc, all of which I used at the same venue within the past year. M 1225 HH Wedges: Along with the aforementioned weather problems, these stood up to the rigors of everyone?s favorite musician, the climber, without a crushed grill. The sound quality was superb, up to par with other touring class 12? wedges, with little or no eq. As I do with most any (non drum) monitor, I high passed the entire mix at around 150 to prevent the buildup of stage mud. Beyond that, all EQ work was microphone and room specific. I used them in and outdoors for over a month, in front of acts ranging from ?Nobody You?ve Heard Of? at a record label battle of the bands, to the "A listers" mentioned above. I was able to meet the needs of every one of these artists, with headroom to spare. The only artist that I was not able to use the wedges successfully with was an extremely loud, top 10 ?numetal? band, who?s stage volume was over 110dbA from backline only. I don?t really feel that this was a design problem with the wedges, this is a band that NEEDS sheer output over everything else. They would probably be better suited with pairs of the huge three way wedges out there, or better yet, get over the noise problem and use in ears. Though I do hear rumor of a new higher powered 15" version of this wedge in the works.... ATA 618C HH subs Tremendous output and still solid down to 35hz, where they dropped off quickly. Two centerstacked outdoors for 1000 people, under 4 per side of the L 2821, and we had all of the PA that we needed. The cardioid pattern worked just as advertised. Even with the subs right against the stage, there was none of the onstage bass buildup that we get from other big name subs used in the same configuration. The subs had no problem with the rain either. I also used these inside the Stone Pony as sidefill subs and drum subs. The sidefill setup was hilarious. I had to provide the subs, amps, and crossover for under the band?s tops. Well, the tops turned out to be some Cerwin Vega double 15"&1" DJ specials, powered by a CE1000. Needless to say, I had the subs about 20 dB down from the tops to get the balance correct. Looking at it made me think of putting monster truck wheels under a Yugo. The boxes were spectacular as a drum sub as well. The band was an eighties metal relic revival, each member deafer than the other. I was mixing monitors, and the B.E. was at FOH. When our standard 5kw drum fill and sub were not enough, I pulled the EONAs out of the truck. I stacked them on top of each other, crossed them at 70hz, and used the regular front loaded sub as a midbass/low cab, filling in 70 to 300, the double 15 mids from 300-1.2, and highs 1.2 and up. With this setup I was able to make the drummer quite happy. I had to use a gate to give him the low end hit from the kick that he wanted, but at that point I had both his overstuffed/partly torn spandex and the remnants of his mullet flapping in the breeze. Once again, the cardioid pattern of the subs was well appreciated, this time by me. The back of the subs were pointed directly at monitor world, but I had no problems all night with wash. Noise boy at FOH was unhappy though- I had about the same amount of sub juice on deck as he had out front! A quick dive into the main DSP to align everything to the repositioned fill solved that problem, unfortunately it was still 80?s metal coming out of the boxes. A word to the wise, though. You may be able to get the output of 4 or so double 18's from one box, but be sure that you have loaders! These boxes are advertised at 357 lbs, feel at least 400 , and are built like a tank. Watching them get lifted off of the dollies reminded me of when we used to make a game of moving people's Beetles onto their lawns. U 103 HH over ATA 118 HH I used these as sidefills and a drum fill as well. Good thump from the 118, similar in output to a properly powered SRX728 double 18, except for the fact that it went quite a bit lower before dropping off. The U103 tops were a perfect match, and needed little or no EQ to sound great. They were dead stable as sidefills, and as a drum fill with an OM7 (I love singing drummers- NOT) just inches away only a few small dips at 400, 1.2, and 3.15 were needed. I also used the U103s as infills and delays with the 2821s. Perfect match tonally, with timing the only thing needed to make them fit right in with the mains. I was actually able to make the split at the process rack, with no need for separate EQ. I would have no qualms with using the U103/118 combo on a small gig. The tops are arrayable, so owning 4 of each would be perfect for a small sound company, or for over the counter rental stock. 1 over 1 per side for up to 200 or so, and 2 over 2, maybe coupling all 4 subs in the center, would likely be adequate for all but the loudest of bands for up to 400 or so indoors. Overall, I have been very impressed by each of the Eona boxes that I have used so far. Unfortunately, one of the biggest hurdles that the company faces will be market penetration. Although the quality is in the same range, the price of the boxes put them up there with some of the biggest names in the business. You wind up with the old conundrum of a company looking to add them to inventory shying away because they aren't on riders, and not being on riders because nobody is using them yet. I wish Alex, Bennett, and the entire company the best of luck in getting past this situation. The product is excellent, and I look forward to the day of Eona being talked about and implemented in the same circles as Meyer, Adamson, Nexo, and the like. |
Phil LaDue wrote on Tue, 18 September 2007 23:56 |
See Bennett, I got you another bite in the UK. |
Simon Tucker wrote on Tue, 18 September 2007 19:01 | ||
Hmm, so I am not the first?? Simon |
Simon Tucker wrote on Tue, 18 September 2007 16:58 |
Anyway enought of that .. I am intrigued by what you guys have to offer, and was wondering if there were any cabs over here in the UK that are doing the demo rounds? I currently use a Nexo Ps15 system, which I am very happy with, but in the never ending task of trying to downsize, but retain quality, active speakers seem to be more and more attractive. With all the reviews the EONA cabs are getting, I would like to hear some. (Particularly since in your recent post you state they .. the U103's .. are potentially able to hit 134dB peak .. the same as a Ps15) |