Komentáře •

  • @ryandunnison
    @ryandunnison Před 2 lety +2121

    I'd love to see a longer form video showing 'the ultimate pc audio setup' or just a how to guide for different audio options since there's a lot of them and it's not always clear what you can do with your motherboard and when you should look to invest in a sound card or if you can get an external amp instead etc.

    • @joshuad1716
      @joshuad1716 Před 2 lety +13

      Yamaha hs5 and that’s it

    • @jimmified
      @jimmified Před 2 lety +6

      Seems like a vid on the main channel

    • @daniel-1976
      @daniel-1976 Před 2 lety +20

      I'll throw in behind this as well. Because for me I'd like to get an in depth on "audio out " on mobos. I'm outputting from that little jack on the back of my mobo to a decent Denon amp with some wharfedale diamond 220 speakers attached.
      I'd love to get some insight on how the mobo output effects the end result.

    • @Jako1987
      @Jako1987 Před 2 lety +2

      So large full range speakers, good amp and acoustic treatment to the space? 😎

    • @tiavor
      @tiavor Před 2 lety +3

      definitely. I went the "go nuts" route with an AVR and bit standing speakers (+ bookshelf for rear channels + sub + center)

  • @badbits2747
    @badbits2747 Před 2 lety +551

    Protip: Acoustically treating your room with sound absorbing foam and/or bass traps can be so significant in a small room, that it'll feel like you've upgraded whatever speakers you already have. The placement and angle of the speakers in relation to your listening position and the room's dimensions can improve things as well. It can actually be mathematically calculated for optimal performance.

    • @5urg3x
      @5urg3x Před 2 lety +17

      Yes. Bass traps are huge in small rooms.

    • @Walhor
      @Walhor Před 2 lety +8

      Agreed, moved into an apartment with a tiny room for my pc. Every other room had some wood planks in the ceiling too reduce noise bounce because holy hell was the noise horrible. Had to bring in a couch and big rug too reduce it just a little bit

    • @MarcusH...
      @MarcusH... Před 2 lety +58

      @@Tanks_In_Space audio > wife

    • @DX88
      @DX88 Před 2 lety +5

      My PC is in the middle of the living room, I don't think my wife would approve.

    • @DE3P_Beats
      @DE3P_Beats Před 2 lety +14

      @@Tanks_In_Space as Marcus said, audio > wife

  • @theAessaya
    @theAessaya Před 2 lety +188

    Getting a pair of solid studio monitors for my PC was the best decision ever. And I've helped a couple of friends convert as well. All of them commented on the sound "it's like having headphones on, but without all the head pressure or wires".
    There also is another consideration for choosing speakers for PC that wasn't mentioned: the designed field distance (i.e. what is the intended distance from speaker to listener). Many bookshelf/home theater speakers are designed to be mid- or even far-field, making them suboptimal for use with PC, where listener is usually very close to the speakers.
    Studio monitors, on the other hand, are usually designed as near-field, with wider angles of accurate reproduction off the axis, meaning your sound will not be as affected by the position of your head as it would be with mid- or far-field speakers, whose sound cones are narrower.

    • @Oystein87
      @Oystein87 Před 2 lety +6

      Having good speakers in correct placement so the sound imaging is the way it should is BETTER and more natural than having headphones/headsett on😜

    • @snotvlek4721
      @snotvlek4721 Před 2 lety +3

      Don't forget to treat the room you're in, that makes a lot of difference too!

    • @theAessaya
      @theAessaya Před 2 lety +1

      @@snotvlek4721 I did, and even just a couple of pieces of accoustic foam got rid of a lot of unwanted resonances. I just need some bass traps for the sub now.

    • @sirena7116
      @sirena7116 Před 2 lety

      I have monitors setup correctly and a sub, and I can't believe how much better games sound.

    • @csciabar
      @csciabar Před 5 měsíci

      Looking for recommendations. Seems like to many options.

  • @techtt6213
    @techtt6213 Před 2 lety +106

    Many great options out there, for every budget something. Jusy don't buy the gaming stuff, that's usually crap.

  • @fredjohan1666
    @fredjohan1666 Před 2 lety +22

    A longer video on this subject would be nice with some testing and showing some more speakers to choose from... etc etc I use pioneer S dj60X speaker for my music pc , and use a pioneer Pioneer DJm 700 as amp. Sounds great with gaming too. Greetings from The Netherlands.

  • @MonicaElleRose
    @MonicaElleRose Před 2 lety +4

    ive been using the same altec lansing speakers for about 20 years and they're phenomenal, im able to angle them properly so that my mic audio doesn't pick up the speaker surround sound.

  • @Sircliffe
    @Sircliffe Před 2 lety +45

    17 year old Logitech Z-5000 represent. Works like a charm still. Only issue is the LCD backlight has gone dim.

    • @triggertits
      @triggertits Před 2 lety

      I have the same set, bought it in 2007'ish. Unfortunately, the subwoofer stopped working. Damn shame, it was a great set of speakers, but the satellite speakers still work like a charm.

    • @triggertits
      @triggertits Před 2 lety +1

      @@ianvisser7899 I think you're missing the point buddy. At the time, this was one of the best set of speakers for the pc, unless you wanted to invest +10k on studio equipment.

    • @AndreasElf
      @AndreasElf Před 2 lety

      Have them aswell. Not the best setup, but very capable.
      Though I would like to upgrade in the future.
      The base could be quicker and the speakers could have a bit more base to them aswell.

    • @ravenof1985
      @ravenof1985 Před 2 lety

      I have a set of Juster 3D601s speakers i bought in the early/mid2000's, the ONLY fault they have is that the power LED burnt out a decade ago. ill probably replace them with a set of 3D602's IF they ever die

    • @zondervon
      @zondervon Před 2 lety +1

      @@triggertits Actually, even back then plugging a basic stereo amp and two smaller bookshelf speakers was still an option. And you could do it at a reasonable price. Not $20 bucks, but the sound difference would be drastic.

  • @canarbn3com
    @canarbn3com Před 2 lety

    I am still using a set of Cambridge SoundWorks 2.1 speakers made in 2000..i bought at a garage sale for 15 bucks.....in 2006.....quite happy and have tried different sound systems and keep coming back to these ..

  • @daleneuman6593
    @daleneuman6593 Před 2 lety +16

    You rock James! Clear and concise info with just a dash of comic relief.

  • @JoeBob79569
    @JoeBob79569 Před 2 lety +5

    Nice to finally see some audio stuff here!
    I have an Atmos receiver for my PC audio, 5.1.2, connected with HDMI, but it's a pain to set up because you have to tell Windows that you have a second display connected, when you really don't; and so you end up with a second non-existent, but still existing, display at the side or the corner of your screen, and it can be a black hole for the mouse, or some files or folders if you end up moving them into the void accidently.

    • @victortitov1740
      @victortitov1740 Před 2 lety

      hmm... is it the reason why i couldn't make an hdmi sound extractor box work as a kind of sound card? How do you convince windows there is a monitor there when there actually isn't?

    • @victortitov1740
      @victortitov1740 Před 2 lety

      @@Tanks_In_Space we did, but i think it still didn't work without an actual tv on the other end. And we still haven't managed to push anything beyond stereo to the audio box, even though the box supported 5.1.

    • @JoeBob79569
      @JoeBob79569 Před 2 lety

      @@victortitov1740 My setup goes like this:
      Display Port from the GPU to monitor.
      HDMI from the GPU to receiver.
      And then I just go into Nvidia Control Panel and I set up multiple displays there, add the second display, and I drag it around find a location where it interferes the least.
      You might also have to go into Set Up Digital Audio in the NCP, but generally once the receiver is displayed in NCP, or in Windows Settings> Display you should be good to go, once you set everything correctly, like Windows audio settings, HDMI input on the receiver, etc..
      But, yea, I think the HDMI device would probably need to send some feedback to the computer, so that it knows that it's there, and what it is. My receiver, for example, shows up in Windows as "AV Receiver", and in NCP with the correct brand name.

    • @victortitov1740
      @victortitov1740 Před 2 lety

      @@Tanks_In_Space it is. The option to switch to 5.1 audio is grayed out... When using the audio box as a passthrough, we got horrible picture quality (low bandwidth?), with a dedicated splitter we got good picture. But 5.1 just never worked =( but it did work with a blu-ray player. We wanted to build an epic sound system with a custom dsp, but this unreliability of it all made us drop the project.
      My laptop has the hdmi wired to intel gpu. It does have a second gpu (nvidia), but i don't think nvidia control panel can control whatis sent out to the hdmi. And intel control panel is ... dead =) as are most other UWPs on my system somehow, i think i wrecked the system by trying to get access to the file system containing the UWPs to mess with them.

  • @stelp7617
    @stelp7617 Před 2 lety +2

    Been using Yamaha bookshelf speakers now for years, and recently upgraded my amp to an Audioengine N22 from an old Pioneer home theatre receiver. Paired with my Asus Xonar Essence STX soundcard, just lovely.

    • @youtubeshadowbannedme
      @youtubeshadowbannedme Před 2 lety

      I'm using budget Pioneer headphones and they sound far better than anything I've ever used

  • @mikekruchten2260
    @mikekruchten2260 Před 2 lety +2

    I really appreciate the audio coverage. I want to see a full blown high end audio set up and the tuning process! the auto calibration stuff is pretty cool now but I think people would love to see a manual tune, measuring corners for resonant frequencies and bass traps, *drool*

    • @zaqueattaq
      @zaqueattaq Před 2 lety +1

      that will have to come when they open LTT labs eventually, you can really do a lot with some acoustic pannels and they really aren't that expensive to make, you can make 6 2" thick pannels for around $100. Preferably though you'd want to go with 4" thick pannels two of them at your first angle of reflection so on and so on

  • @vdfritzz
    @vdfritzz Před 2 lety +82

    1:55 people have no idea HOW FUCKING INSANE studio speakers sound, you literally have to stand in front of them and listen to understand
    it's not about the volume, it's not how low the bass goes, they sound so damn clean, a small pair of sudio speakers sound WAAAAAY BETTER than standard speakers, even better than quality bookshelf speakers on a good receiver
    doesn't matter if you listen to high quality flac files or watch this youtube video on it, they are just great

    • @YOEL_44
      @YOEL_44 Před 2 lety +17

      Chill dude, we know, but you also have to spend way more, quality doesn't come free.

    • @nixx5490
      @nixx5490 Před 2 lety +5

      But there is always a guy that know nothing about audio that will say that studio speaker are for producing music and are not good for listening… because… they don’t know there just like to say dumb things like this

    • @Kerdtress
      @Kerdtress Před 2 lety +4

      People have no idear how good anything can sound if you buy any kind of decent audio Gear instead of shitty PC/Gaming stuff.
      While i would recommend Studio Monitors too because of simplicity and the sound in Nearfield even with untreated rooms im staying with Hifi Bookshelf Speakers well placed like my Elac Vela BS403.
      But i can design my Desk Setup around my Speakers which most can not :D

    • @vdfritzz
      @vdfritzz Před 2 lety +1

      @@Kerdtress i use an old panasonic dvd/hometheater with tiny center, L and R channels and a tiny subwoofer lmao i used to work at a repair shop that repaired high end receivers, studio monitors and those enormous professional mixing and DJ gear, i was exposed to a lot of high quality audio equipment but the studio monitors were something else

    • @Pretagonist
      @Pretagonist Před 2 lety

      Yeah, I got myself a pair of Adam studio speakers and I'm never going back. The crispness of the sound is incredible. Sure I could have had more boom if I got a pair of pc speakers with a sub but with the studio speakers you can actually hear every single sound which is great for audio presence in games.
      It's a bit more expensive, you need more cables and you don't get all the bells and whistles like Bluetooth, displays, fancy knob and such but the studio equipment people are way, way better at producing clear flat sound (flat as in no distortion or arbitrary amplification)

  • @MrWitheridge
    @MrWitheridge Před 2 lety +143

    Glad to see you threw Edifier a mention - they are great!

    • @t94xr
      @t94xr Před 2 lety +9

      I know, those 1280Ts are amazing - some of the best speakers (in the budget/home category) you can buy apparently. I love the sound that comes out of them!

    • @totherik91
      @totherik91 Před 2 lety +15

      I have that Edifier R1280DB (The same speaker like in this video, just with added bluetooth). Its the best damn speaker i ever had for my computer, i really recommend it!

    • @sptauto
      @sptauto Před 2 lety +4

      They're cheap, they're not great. Actually quite poor, objectively speaking.

    • @Alberos
      @Alberos Před 2 lety +5

      I'm using R1700BT, they sounds great...., with some setting adjusted and one big "but". First, the settings, I turned the bass down and treble up quite a bit to get it to sound clearly and less boommy bass. And the "but", it sucks at sub bass! (not surprised, it has no subwoofer) I can't hear anything under 50-ish Hz or so. They did tell you that this set can't produce sub bass in the spec thou (they listed the frequency respond of around 50Hz and up, I think). Also, if you want sub bass, you can get the one with sub anyway, they have one. I'm happy with this set, they sound wayy better than any "PC Speaker" I tested at that time.

    • @sptauto
      @sptauto Před 2 lety +3

      @@Alberos Their drivers are out of phase, they use cheap crossover components, and sit in an improperly treated speaker cabinet with resonance issues. They're ok IF and only IF you do a craptonne of DIY fixing. Them playing sub-frequencies is also not a good thing, that just means they have a shitty crossover design. A midrange woofer is only supposed to play between 150-2500Hz, anything more or less adds distortion.

  • @reddragonsmaw
    @reddragonsmaw Před 2 lety +40

    So I have been using my home theater receiver to power my audio from my PC since before HDMI existed. As such I'm fairly confused why we would completely ignore one of the most compelling use cases for HDMI 2.1's capabilities, that modern graphics cards provide. One of the few sources that can even take advantage of the high bitrate audio, Pre-amps, and recievers support, is the HDMI port on your video card! I understand most people are not gaming on their 75" tv from their PC, but some of us have been trying to unify our entertainment solution to a fewer devices, since the days of the "All In Wonder" cards of great antiquity... It's disappointing though, that the home theater HDMI option was left out of the video all together. Amplifies come in many forms also, and MOST actually use the XLR connector, in the audiophile world. I'm sure Linus and James are quite aware and familiar with this given their previous videos showing them utilizing these setups. So then why nyx the option entirely? Even still, love the video, and hope to see more audio related content in the future!

    • @TrioLOLGamers
      @TrioLOLGamers Před 2 lety +1

      Yep HDMI ARC for me is a life changer to not carry an analog cable in your room but the issue is that 90% of the time you have one ARC port in TV and ONE output port (probably not ARC) on the amplifier. Like why do they do this? It doesn't cost a lot dammit!!!

    • @BEXYSPC
      @BEXYSPC Před 2 lety +4

      No to mention that alot of games support surround sound using multi channel PCM through HDMI.

    • @mcramp20
      @mcramp20 Před 2 lety +1

      YES!!!

    • @trentonbennettVO
      @trentonbennettVO Před 2 lety +4

      It can be a trade-off in that if you have a really good monitor, you may have to use a DisplayPort cable to get the full color range out of it if the monitor doesn't support 4:4:4 via HDMI. Even so, I do similar to you and simply use a DisplayPort directly to the monitor and then an HDMI cable out to an old home theater receiver that only outputs audio. Weird side effect: the HDMI signal will not send more than Stereo down the cable *unless* I specifically set the "refresh rate" of the receiver-that-doesn't-have-a-monitor to 60Hz via the advanced graphics options in Windows. I suspect it's relying on the signal frequency to determine the bit rate that can be sent through the cable to the receiver. Even then, I have to get into the old-school Sound Properties panel, right-click, and "Configure speakers" (and walk through that wizard) sometimes to remind the machine that the receiver can do 7.1.

    • @BEXYSPC
      @BEXYSPC Před 2 lety +1

      @@trentonbennettVO I have a seperate HDMI cable running the the receiver. works fine in my case :)

  • @Kasper0822
    @Kasper0822 Před 2 lety +2

    My first step was getting active edifier speakers which was a huge upgrade. Now i have a speaker amp with two tower speakers and a sub for TV + couch and two bookshelf speakers for when i want to use the desk. Theres also a headphone amp and hifiman edition xs headphones when i don't want to piss off my neighbours.

  • @TigerClaw305
    @TigerClaw305 Před 2 lety +9

    In regards to PC speakers, There are some that give you 5.1 surround, The back of a soundcard would have outputs for the front, surround, center and the back speakers, They also have outputs for using an optical cable to get 5.1 surround as well, It really depends on your setup, If your someone who watches movies or game in 5.1 surround sound.

    • @fermitupoupon1754
      @fermitupoupon1754 Před 2 lety

      The thing with that is that TOSLINK or SPDIF for that matter, don't support uncompressed 6 channel audio. Yes it works with Netflix or other steaming services like that, because they generally offer Dolby Digital or DTS compressed streams which the reciever then decodes.
      However most games and things like TeamSpeak or Discord do not support this. They will send an uncompressed PCM stream for the audio, in which case TOSLINK and SPDIF limit you to 2 channel audio.
      Now if you're using HDMI, the Handy Dandy Movie Interface, that does support 6 or more channels of uncompressed PCM.

  • @Preske
    @Preske Před 2 lety +34

    I have these 20+ year old pc speakers from cambridge soundworks and they still work like a charm. Compact too, they fit right under my monitor, which is handy, as I don't have much useable deskspace.

    • @88porpoise
      @88porpoise Před 2 lety

      I have Amazon Basics Bluetooth speakers....
      Good enough for me.

    • @MikeStavola
      @MikeStavola Před 2 lety +2

      I have a few sets of these. Some older computer audio systems sound really good. My lab PC has a 2.1 Bose PC system hooked to it. A Companion 5. I found them on the curb on my way into work one day. They're the kind with a dedicated USB DAC. It honestly sounds really good for a workshop system.
      And... after looking them up, I found that they sell used for over $300. Hm.

    • @TalesOfWar
      @TalesOfWar Před 2 lety +2

      I still have some Logitech Z4's. They've been through at least 4 entirely new PC builds, probably more. Still sound pretty good for my small space. I keep looking for something new but they're all either some stupid shape or massive. I'm rather space constrained! I'd rather have my 3 27" monitors on the desk than sacrifice one for some nicer speakers lol.

    • @Preske
      @Preske Před 2 lety +1

      @@MikeStavola nice!

    • @TraneFrancks
      @TraneFrancks Před 2 lety +3

      I had a pair of Cambridge SoundWorks PCWorks that worked beautifully for over 20 years. They heaved their final sigh only about 18 months ago. Best hundred bucks I ever spent.

  • @Cobb
    @Cobb Před 2 lety +1

    I love my Soundsticks III, other than the power switch breaking they've been amazing.

  • @fzz6716
    @fzz6716 Před 2 lety +1

    Good Audio is a very important part of the PC experience. I just bought a presonus eres 3.5 and it blew my mind.

  • @mayh3xx
    @mayh3xx Před rokem +3

    Im only 2 minutes in and I just gotta commend you for your editing! Just the right amount of everything if that makes sense.

  • @Zuriki09
    @Zuriki09 Před 2 lety +32

    I went through this whole rabbit hole recently. Ended up picking up some active Edifier speakers. I'm not an audiophile, I just wanted something better than the crappy PC speakers and an external amp was just too much additional crap I'd have to buy.

    • @rafy5289
      @rafy5289 Před 2 lety +2

      Is edifier speaker are good?

    • @greengenesis
      @greengenesis Před 2 lety

      Which model did you go with? I am currently looking into them too.

    • @Zuriki09
      @Zuriki09 Před 2 lety

      @@greengenesis Edifier R1280DB

    • @Zuriki09
      @Zuriki09 Před 2 lety +5

      @@rafy5289 yes, but like I said I'm not an audiophile. I'm sure if you ask someone who is an enthusiast they will tell you to buy some $1000 set-up. For me, these are absolute fine.
      Edifier R1280DB is what I picked up.

    • @EntropyConcept
      @EntropyConcept Před 2 lety +2

      @@Zuriki09 R1280DB is a complete joke. Buy a pair of Adam a4v's with a topping E50. You'll never be able to go back.
      /j
      They're nice little bookshelf speakers, I'm glad you like them. (to others): The edifier r1280t will be a bit cheaper if you don't need Bluetooth, and the edifier mr4's will be nice if you're looking for something that's a little more aesthetically pleasing.

  • @G.A.N.
    @G.A.N. Před 2 lety +1

    That was a very good video i learnt a lot and now i wanna a nice proper studio monitor with big nice clear drivers.

  • @JerryLoffelbein
    @JerryLoffelbein Před 2 lety

    I've been using a bluetooth speaker (Anker Motion+) with an AUX connection to the USB dongle that came with my Corsair HS60's. I can easily swap over to my fancy Audio Technica's with that setup when I need to, and the form factor of BT speakers make them easy to fit under your monitor like a sound bar for a TV.

  • @Ponlets
    @Ponlets Před 2 lety +4

    what about 5.1 or 7.1 surround systems or even something with dual subwoofers like a 5.2 surround or even something Dolby Atmos like with a 7.2.2 setup?

  • @personal-stream-studio
    @personal-stream-studio Před 2 lety +9

    Totally agree! That kind of things that I've always tell my clients.
    But I think external DAC + active speakers generally speaking will be better than passive speakers + amp plugged directly in motherboard.

    • @dantdmnl
      @dantdmnl Před 2 lety +1

      I have passive speakers + amp but also a Sound Blaster Z

    • @Hotrob_J
      @Hotrob_J Před 2 lety

      I went with an audioengine HD3, as they've got a built in DAC, but also à headphone jack and independent volume.
      I don't know if that was the best call vs a separate dac and speaker setup though.

    • @personal-stream-studio
      @personal-stream-studio Před 2 lety

      @@dantdmnl that's cool too I think because you have more presice DAC conversion, better THD+N, etc. in comparison to build-in sound card

    • @personal-stream-studio
      @personal-stream-studio Před 2 lety

      @@Hotrob_J as far as I know these speakers has an analog RCA connection so you can try to use external DAC with it and compare it to one that build in speakers if you're curious!

  • @rannick1982
    @rannick1982 Před 2 lety +1

    For my computer setup, I use a Scarlett Solo and M-Audio studio speakers. Seems to work just fine for me!

  • @michaelbaldwin5953
    @michaelbaldwin5953 Před 2 lety

    I'm using some re purposed old Polk RT3 ((1996 Vintage) book shelf speakers , these are powered by a small SMSL Q5 pro class D amp sitting on top of my tower case.The signal is coming straight out of the USB on the motherboard into the back of the Amp.Some Old Oxygen free Speaker cabling completes the job...Sounds really great...and did not cost me a lot.

  • @josenunez7422
    @josenunez7422 Před 2 lety +70

    I remember my first pc speakers. Altec Lansing, they sound great and they're still alive after 20 years

    • @kr19569
      @kr19569 Před 2 lety +1

      My first one was a Yamaha 2.0. Can't remember the model, but boy, were they good. Lasted almost 8 years before I accidentally blew them up.

    • @darrenfalconer3267
      @darrenfalconer3267 Před 2 lety +7

      my first was the internal piezo haha

    • @Spirch
      @Spirch Před 2 lety

      altec lansing mx5021, i'm using them right now 😀

    • @josenunez7422
      @josenunez7422 Před 2 lety +4

      @@kr19569 they aren't made as before. quality back then was waaay better. everything was built like a tank. the only thing bad about then was the white color, now a disgusting yellow, but still sound amazing after 20+ years
      .

    • @kr19569
      @kr19569 Před 2 lety +1

      @@josenunez7422 haha, got that one right. Mine were White too. 😁

  • @philgoodinc2
    @philgoodinc2 Před 2 lety +2

    One thing not completely mentioned is, If you get Active Studio monitors, (like Yamaha HS, JBL PRO LSR and KRK ROKITs) you should also get an interface and decent quality balanced cables relevant to your hardware. While there are cables that convert 3.5mm headphone jack to XLR/Balanced TRS which technically "work", they pick up interference. I believe the bookshelf speaker varieties that have RCA inputs are different and dont have this issue.
    Having a decent interface also would give you better power to drive headphones and also allow you to use XLR microphones.

  • @fernbobbio
    @fernbobbio Před 2 lety

    I have a little old Philips stereo system (5 CDs and MP3/WMA support) that has a glorious USB B connection for PCs. No PC audio or soundcard required, Windows will detect it directly as a digital audio output. Its controls (remote or in system) even allow you to skip, play, pause or stop songs. I love it, and I never saw anything similar in all these years since I bought it back in 2002.

  • @Brokenhill42
    @Brokenhill42 Před 2 lety +3

    Love that you guys are covering more audio stuff. I love my Wharfedale Diamond 10.1 passive speakers! As others have mentioned, absorption treatment is HUGE...I have 8 GIK acoustic panels myself. Helps a ton, though the price and bulk aren't for everyone...

  • @Chrispd100
    @Chrispd100 Před 2 lety +7

    Really wish LTT would do more reviews about computer speakers from an audiophile stand point. The side by side comparisons of desktop speakers would be awesome!

  • @reddeadflame1
    @reddeadflame1 Před 2 lety

    I have a sound bar above my monitor about 5 inches on the top shelf of my desk and the 6inch wireless sub under my desk and it works really well even for positional audio. its a 38inch vizio sound bar so left and right audio is great, and with dts vitrual x when it rains in game or battle field and bullets fly past it sounds like its around and over my head

  • @IrishLuckyy
    @IrishLuckyy Před 2 lety +1

    I have been using those pebble speakers they showed as an example for awhile. I actually really like them.

  • @kurtis4572
    @kurtis4572 Před 2 lety +2

    I connected a receiver via hdmi to graphics card. 5.1 surround sound system sounds amazing!

  • @jbrone1241
    @jbrone1241 Před 2 lety +12

    My old speaker would pickup Spanish can drivers radios. Do you know how creepy it is to hear voices come out of your speakers at 3 A.M.

    • @nulious
      @nulious Před 2 lety

      Put snap on ferrite beads on all of the cables

    • @boristheblade209
      @boristheblade209 Před 2 lety +1

      my logitec 5.1 used to do this, always freaked me out

    • @pugorilla8848
      @pugorilla8848 Před 2 lety

      For certain people, that would be useful.
      People who like creepy stuff, or radio spying.

  • @Friedbrain11
    @Friedbrain11 Před 2 lety +1

    I been running a set of G20 speakers from Logitech for 12 years and they still sound just great. Might eventually need to replace them. A longer video pertaining to budget setups and higher would be much appreciated.

  • @tlove21
    @tlove21 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I use fxsound on my Windows 11 and it doubled my audio volume, and cleared up my sound. I never realized how bad my audio was until I could hear the lead singers clearly. I don't use PC speakers, I connect the speakers you recommended and plug into the green port. You can hear my music a block away. I have 4 tower speakers in my setup and a subwoofer, but I really need to upgrade.

  • @Dyonivan
    @Dyonivan Před 2 lety +3

    Back in March, I bought my "dream PC" for gaming, but neither it nor the monitor came with a speaker. I've been using a cheap $15 bluetooth speaker for the time being, but finally got around to buying the SoundBlaster Katana V2 soundbar. So excited to hear audio from a decent speaker system.

    • @zwenkwiel816
      @zwenkwiel816 Před 2 lety +1

      dont you get lag with bluetooth though? like I've only used some cheap bluetooth speaker on my phone and for music it's fine but video (or games I imagine) are horrible because of the pretty bad lag on the audio

    • @Dyonivan
      @Dyonivan Před 2 lety

      @@zwenkwiel816 I haven't noticed any lag with the cheap bluetooth speaker, but it has like no bass at all. So if someone is speaking and says a hard consonant, it sounds like the person gagged for a moment. The speaker is also only like three feet from the antenna of the computer. I'll be using an optical cable to hook up the soundbar though.

    • @sptauto
      @sptauto Před 2 lety +1

      I'm disappointed you've been lead to believe that is in any way a comporable listening device. Soundbars are acoustically one of the stupidest designs to hit the market, and you're genuinely missing out. It's unfortunate to see so many people succumb to marketing gimmicks.

    • @SamuraiGuy
      @SamuraiGuy Před 2 lety +1

      @@sptauto Soundbars can be really good. I'm sorry someone convinced you otherwise.
      That said, I don't believe the Razer leviathan to be a good sound system, but it will be an incredible jump from a cheap Bluetooth speaker.

    • @Dyonivan
      @Dyonivan Před 2 lety +3

      @@sptauto Okay so now that I've been using the Katana V2 for a few days now, I feel like I can finally respond to you. First off, you don't know my situation. I'm disabled, so I'd have to ask other people to set up a proper sound system. And if I wanted to change something? I have to ask them again. That's a lot of favors to call in. A soundbar is simple and convenient.
      But I don't regret my purchase at all. This soundbar sounds better than any speakers I've ever had in my life. It does everything I want it to and more. I use earbuds when I'm talking to people online so they don't hear an echo of themselves, and I expected to have to plug them in and out whenever I wanted to change what I'm listening to. But not with this system - there's a button to press to switch to the earbuds and back again. It's so convenient. And I know when I get a PS5, all I need to do to connect it to the soundbar is use a USB cable and it'll immediately be setup. And this soundbar just looks great.

  • @onlynemesisR32
    @onlynemesisR32 Před 2 lety +33

    I decided to try those Edifier 1280db last year... now, I have one pair for my gaming PC, one pair for my working PC and one pair in the dinning room! Love them!!

    • @t94xr
      @t94xr Před 2 lety +3

      I picked up a pair cheap, when I started to use them I did a bit of research and found out they're like really really highly rated speakers, it was a "gem product" - cheap speakers for not-so cheap sound. Love em!

    • @myselfshubhamrana
      @myselfshubhamrana Před 2 lety

      Are they better than Harman Kardon Soundsticks?

    • @myselfshubhamrana
      @myselfshubhamrana Před 2 lety

      @Telleva I prefer Harman Kardon over Sony any day, except in some products.

    • @myselfshubhamrana
      @myselfshubhamrana Před 2 lety

      @Telleva Price is no issue. I just want quality.
      I have Soundsticks Wireless ( or wireless version of III). It's sounds amazing, but since I had it since years, I am desiring if something even more amazing is possible. I have eyes on Audioengine. Was just checking where this Edifier stands in hierarchy.

    • @myselfshubhamrana
      @myselfshubhamrana Před 2 lety

      @Telleva Audioengine and Devialet are my go to right now. Will check what you suggested. Haven't touched anything with seperate amp. Seperate amp is not that common in India. We don't even know we have to worry about something like an amp.

  • @ronytroche
    @ronytroche Před 2 lety

    nice and simple video with lots of helpful information, thanks

  • @carlaustin1093
    @carlaustin1093 Před 2 lety +2

    Also a lot of pc's offer a optical output. Purchasing a set of speakers that offer a optical (digital) input will add to the sound quality. Those Edifier speakers shown in this video are a great all in one solution. Also more home stereo amplifiers also have optical inputs to accommodate that solution.

    • @LovelyDoetje
      @LovelyDoetje Před 2 lety

      Optical is limited. You will not have high res and no modern surround system.

  • @rist98
    @rist98 Před 2 lety +16

    Me, a sound engineer, wondering why im even watching this vid. Good vid tho. :D

    • @wilppuse
      @wilppuse Před 2 lety +1

      To nitpick ofc

    • @Mopsie
      @Mopsie Před 2 lety +2

      @@wilppuse lol you must be fun

  • @akmartinez1
    @akmartinez1 Před 2 lety +5

    I just recently found and connected an old Cambridge Soundworks 5.1 speaker setup I had for my home theater when I was living single... I connected it to my PC and absolutely love the sound!!! I got in trouble with the wifey for playing my music and games through my PC...

    • @Preske
      @Preske Před 2 lety

      i have the 2.1. it's amazing

  • @svartdraken
    @svartdraken Před 2 lety +1

    I got the Nommo Pro, which are no audiophile product, but still do an amazing job and have a ton of connectivity - which was one of the main features I needed. One button to switch between pc, phone and Xbox . Then Microsoft removed toslink but that's another story

  • @curvingfyre6810
    @curvingfyre6810 Před 2 lety +1

    underated move btw: one of those dvd-player integrated home theater setups packaged all in one. so long as it's a solid brand and a decent model, the tuning is done for you, the form factor for the amp/dac is reasonable, and it'll take at least one standard input, usually 1-2 analog and digital options. Often, you can even find them with very small surround setups. I myself have a philips 5.1 setup, takes optical. since I don't use the dvd player, the box is on its side leaning on the rear side of my PC tower, and each speaker is small enough to sit on my desk, with the appropriate positioning and everything. these things have full enthusiast grade DACs, and amps that, while not particularly stellar, are *very* well tuned for their included speakers. Picked it up for 10 bucks at a thrift store.

    • @someoneelse5005
      @someoneelse5005 Před 2 lety

      did the same thing, got myself a "neo" braded DVD player for $30 unopened and brand new even though it was produced in 2003, it works amazingly!

  • @zeveroarerules
    @zeveroarerules Před 2 lety +5

    For tight and "exact" sound make sure you overspec your amp to your speakers.

    • @mndlessdrwer
      @mndlessdrwer Před 2 lety

      Also reduces the risk of clipping. Clipping can kill your speakers faster than putting too much power through them unless you're severely exceeding their maximum power handling on a continuous basis.

    • @evlkenevl2721
      @evlkenevl2721 Před 2 lety +1

      👆 This. A lot of people think an amp rated above what the speakers are rated will blow the speakers. It can, if you crank it way up, but using an amp rated lower and turning it up to the point of distortion is more likely to kill your speakers.

    • @mndlessdrwer
      @mndlessdrwer Před 2 lety

      @@evlkenevl2721 Clipping kills speakers shockingly quickly. I mean, they aren't great at coping with square-wave signals, after all. They CAN, but not for very long and not at high volumes. It's hell on the poor voice coil.

  • @alexanderdiogenes8067
    @alexanderdiogenes8067 Před 2 lety +11

    I've been using a regular stereo receiver out to big ol' hifi floor speakers from my old stereo for yeaaaars. Audio interface -> receiver -> speakers

  • @maestro0428
    @maestro0428 Před 2 lety +1

    Running Kef Q150s and a Kef Subwoofer with Adcom Amplifier and Schiit DAC at my workstation. Good stuff, great experience.

  • @pinkcanoe
    @pinkcanoe Před 2 lety

    And if you really want the most accurate sound, it might also be worth considering a dedicated DAC (digital to analog converter). I used one of Audioquest's USB DACs with my laptop and it really made an audible difference in the sound quality. Essentially it bypasses the DAC on your computer's motherboard to convert the digital signal directly.

  • @aloniumbonium
    @aloniumbonium Před 2 lety +10

    You're really good at making an expensive setup sound like it's not actually that expensive

    • @SamuraiGuy
      @SamuraiGuy Před 2 lety +2

      Welcome to HiFi/audiophiles

    • @gtx1650max-q
      @gtx1650max-q Před 2 lety

      fr, throw 300$ dollar and you get lady gaga produce all sounds for ya

    • @zippymagee
      @zippymagee Před 2 lety +1

      Exactly LOL ...my discounted amp and borrowed surround speakers turned into a $1000 system quickly.

  • @lukas0999
    @lukas0999 Před 2 lety +3

    0:18 My parents have exactly(look) these since 2009 😂

  • @Goodsdogs
    @Goodsdogs Před 2 lety

    Very cool video , I was just thinking I need a speaker buying guide since I’m still using pc speakers from about 08 new pc old speakers 😂 but your series on wireless ear buds was very helpful.

  • @Heidegaff
    @Heidegaff Před 2 lety +1

    My PC is hooked up to an old bargain bin 5 points Dolby Surround from the mid-90s, costed me like 20 bucks and sounds really impressive

  • @Mr.Morden
    @Mr.Morden Před 2 lety +3

    My suggestion is a video with Linus and 50 Alexas all talking to him at once, then they begin to talk to each other, then they become sentient and they take over the world. But then after they take over the world it actually turns out pretty nice once the apocalypse enthusiasts stop freaking out.

  • @MrTurbo_
    @MrTurbo_ Před 2 lety +3

    One suggestion: use optical audio cables, that's the only way to really get rid of the hissing and it just sounds best in general, if your amp supports USB audio that's also just as good, but most don't support it

    • @ravenrush7336
      @ravenrush7336 Před 2 lety

      Balanced XLR cables are good enough, at least good enough for many professionals recording studios.

    • @sinswithin
      @sinswithin Před 2 lety +1

      @@ravenrush7336 XLR cables need an input/output specifically for them, no? In most cases it's more common to find an optical cable (Usually built into a motherboard) that can be linked out to a DAC/AMP and then to the speakers.
      If you're going for higher end then yes you can go XLR and above. But I think this person was just stating that a digital option will remove any possible electrical interference that running a 3.5mm or RCA cable could pick up from your motherboard etc.

    • @MrTurbo_
      @MrTurbo_ Před 2 lety

      @@sinswithin indeed, that's exactly what I meant

  • @datpudding5338
    @datpudding5338 Před 2 lety +2

    Finally, I was looking for a video about that topic!
    I got some glimps into the hi-fi bubble on YT by now but most of them seemingly don't care about PC speakers at all.

    • @Protegit
      @Protegit Před 2 lety

      As James said "PC speakers aren't necessarily the best way to get sound out of your PC". That's why you dont see these hi-fi YT channels discussing PC speakers. They are designed for someone who doesnt care about audio quality. This kind of speakers is usually designed more for convenience and looks rather than audio accuracy. Also, Im surprised James didnt mention this, but for FPS gaming, you cant really get away with using any kind of speakers. You should always use headphones with good sound-stage. It makes SUCH a difference in FPS gaming. It's kinda like switching from a 60Hz monitor to a 144+ but for sound.

    • @datpudding5338
      @datpudding5338 Před 2 lety

      @@Protegit Well for playing shooters I indeed use headphones but I still hate having headphones on so an decent alternative is more than welcome

  • @waynemv
    @waynemv Před 2 lety

    I still love my nearly twenty year old Altec Lansing 5.1 surround speakers. Even after having been dropped on the floor countless times they still sound good as new.

  • @hardrivethrutown
    @hardrivethrutown Před 2 lety +6

    I'm still using Altec Lansing speakers from the mid-90s
    I actually like the quite a lot, they're pretty solid, ACS90s

    • @rapids444
      @rapids444 Před 2 lety

      i'm using my Altec Lansing's too. I bought mine in 2001 though. Still fantastic for the $50 and MANY MANY moves since then.

  • @Gsoda35
    @Gsoda35 Před rokem +6

    or you could use the onboard motherboard speaker for all audio. enjoy.

    • @pixelreflectorpro
      @pixelreflectorpro Před 10 měsíci

      The ultimate way to listen to music no bass, barely any treble extension, just midrange

  • @jeffleonard343
    @jeffleonard343 Před 2 lety

    Oooo i reused a 5.1 Yamaha receiver since I upgraded my home theater one. Been running it in 2 channel for a set of bookshelf speakers with my pc set. Sounds fantastic!

  • @nen848
    @nen848 Před 2 lety +2

    Yo James sang that "Treble" with such power and quality. Those pipes my man are freaking clean

  • @rickleng6543
    @rickleng6543 Před 2 lety +7

    Am i the only one who uses a 5.1 home theatre system as PC speakers? A little overkill but in my opinion great sound is even more important than good image quality...

    • @gospodinkenobi9903
      @gospodinkenobi9903 Před 2 lety +1

      There's two of us now! I've plugged old LG home thratre to my PC and it is awesome!

    • @akyhne
      @akyhne Před 2 lety +1

      Well, I sort of do too.
      I have an old set of Altec Lansing 5.1 PC surround speakers. But they always sounded horrible.
      So recently I inherited a Bose 5.1 AV 18 media set. It can't play 5.1 from a PC over Toslink. So I "borrowed" the satellites from the Bose system, as well as the double subwoofer, and connected them to the Altec Lansing set.
      After Calibration with a UMIK-1 mic and REW, I now have an excellent 5.1 surround set to my PC.

    • @YOEL_44
      @YOEL_44 Před 2 lety

      Not a home theater but a nice 5.1 computer speaker set, Creative Inspite T6300.

    • @akyhne
      @akyhne Před 2 lety

      And I totally agree with you, that great audio is just as important, as picture quality. I'd raster downgrade my 4K HDR10/Dolby Vision TV to a regular 1080P TV, than having to live without my Denon/Dali/Klipsch/MINIDSP surround set.

    • @rickleng6543
      @rickleng6543 Před 2 lety

      @@gospodinkenobi9903 have you plugged in via hdmi or toslink? I currently use hdmi because my MB doesnt have an optical sound output. So the problem is this invisible 4th monitor where i often get my mouse stuck, its annoying... but I thought about buying a new MB/CPU and I am not sure if toslink delivers the same sound quality. Any experiences?

  • @johnb0815
    @johnb0815 Před 2 lety +7

    I still use the old speakers my dad bought for the first family pc in the late 90s. "Trust Soundwave 20" they sound good even after all these years.

    • @TalesOfWar
      @TalesOfWar Před 2 lety

      Trust stuff used to be EVERYWHERE in the late 90's and early 00's. They were always cheap as hell too. Very hit and miss in regards to quality too but they made so many models of things you could generally find something that did the job well enough for the price.

    • @icemann1908
      @icemann1908 Před 2 lety

      Speakers were made to sound GOOD in the 90's (and before). Until Aiwa and Sony came with their boom boom truvox all bass speakers :(

  • @Hybris51129
    @Hybris51129 Před 2 lety +1

    Audio is one of those things that the older I get the more I have come to appreciate.

  • @KynosMusic
    @KynosMusic Před 2 lety

    Very good advice! --- Been touting it myself since forever.
    Here live a pair of HS8 ^^

  • @djemergency512
    @djemergency512 Před 2 lety +5

    Been using Presonus Studio Monitors for a long time now, great sound

  • @DiogoSotero
    @DiogoSotero Před 2 lety +8

    One of the best choices for pc speakers for the price is the brand edifier

  • @SullenSecret
    @SullenSecret Před 2 lety +1

    For years, I've used a surround receiver to power studio monitor speakers. This transfers the signal from the computer over HDMI. ( I use an Onkyo receiver.) This is the best option for creating a home entertainment environment (over time, considering the extra costs). Another option is a good external audio interface that gets its computer signal from USB. It acts as an external sound card. (I recommend the Minifuse 2 from Arturia.) It sends the audio to a pair of self-powered studio monitors. Finally, the easiest option is to just buy active studio monitors, as the video suggests, that create the audio and power themselves straight from a digital connection.

  • @1992djg
    @1992djg Před 2 lety +1

    I kinda wish they added a little segment about how on-board audio is relatively new as it wasn’t that long ago you needed a sound card to get audio out of your pc and the crazy market section that was dedicated to it

  • @crushablepaper1570
    @crushablepaper1570 Před 2 lety +9

    Been loving my audioengine a2's. Work great with my turntable and got built in Bluetooth

  • @_Andrew
    @_Andrew Před 2 lety +3

    Id love to see more home theater related content of projector technology or home theater rack equipment.

    • @sptauto
      @sptauto Před 2 lety +2

      Then watch somebody else. LTT doesn't know sh*t in regards to audio.

  • @robsku1
    @robsku1 Před 2 lety

    I have a stereo system that has two AUX In connectors - one is connected to a PC, the other is connected to my TV/monitor so you can hear TV _or_ another PC (I have a desktop PC and several laptops) with HDMI through the stereo speakers - it works great and allows me to switch between different devices, including just listening music from the stereo system (although as CD's can be played from my desktop PC, I only use them for old C-casettes).
    PC's, TV and stereos, all with one set of speakers - it's great, especially in small apartment like mine.

  • @THU31
    @THU31 Před 2 lety

    Last time I used PC speakers was 2004. Then I bought an old Yamaha amplifier with a pair of used hi-fi stereo speakers, and I never went back. I just kept gradually upgrading my set up over the years, and now I am extremely happy with my Yamaha receiver and Monitor Audio Bronze surround set.
    And if your budget is very limited, it is always better to buy a good stereo set over a cheap 5.1 set.

  • @jamesrobertson504
    @jamesrobertson504 Před 2 lety +25

    Great video. Can't stand headphones for too long, unless I have to when playing games in multiplayer. Have had PC speakers and subwoofer for as long as they've been around. Great for music, movies and streaming vids. Just got the new Klipsch Heritage ProMedia 2.1 from Costco (about $100 cheaper than Amazon with recent Costco promotion). Had the old ProMedia 2.1, but these sound much better.

    • @JordanPlayz158
      @JordanPlayz158 Před 2 lety

      Yeah, might consider some speakers, took off my headphones and the hair pressed in was literally white lol

    • @LightPink
      @LightPink Před 2 lety

      What headphones do you have? I got the hd 650s and can wear them for 12 hours straight

    • @SephirothSyrraeoth
      @SephirothSyrraeoth Před 2 lety

      Is it a huge difference between the Heritage ProMedia and the standard ProMedia? I have the older style ProMedia 2.1 and they sound quite good to me. Not the best by any stretch, but for the price I'd say it's a good deal.

    • @JordanPlayz158
      @JordanPlayz158 Před 2 lety

      @@LightPink Some $30 headphones, forget the model but I think the issue is just that the headphones are not big enough so the padding on top pushes my hair down rather than just bracing the top of my head but I'm not getting new headphones until they break which takes me a couple years, I'll just deal with it as it's not that big of an issue

    • @jamesrobertson504
      @jamesrobertson504 Před 2 lety +1

      @@SephirothSyrraeoth The 2 desktop speakers are much bigger and have wood enclosures and a retro look. I like the sound better that the standard ProMedia, seems a bit more like regular stereo speakers than a desktop unit. But the one thing I don't like is that the manual volume controls are on the back of the sub unit which is on my floor. You have to use the remote to change the volume or mute the sound (or alternatively the speaker control in the Windows system tray). Other problem is that it seems to have an auto power saver mode, so I have to click once on the remote to bring the sound system back on after not using it for a while.

  • @Dexter101x
    @Dexter101x Před 2 lety +6

    Seems like I've got active speakers, that I bought nearly 30 years ago. Yes, its the oldest part of my computer setup. Had it not been for the mobo not accepting the floppy disk drive, the speakers wouldn't have been the oldest

  • @kj11dot2
    @kj11dot2 Před 2 lety

    It's good to hear that i got the better variant. I use philips 5.1 home theatre setup as my speakers. Ofcourse i don't get the 5.1 sound experience because of the rca cable but using dolby atmos with. That makes them pretty good. (i got the setup for free)

  • @halocdpsn
    @halocdpsn Před 2 lety

    i have klipsch thx 2.1 had them since 2009 still sound great had to replace the volume control thing once few years ago

  • @offbeat4772
    @offbeat4772 Před 2 lety +13

    This sounds so much more complicated, especially when I’m usually wearing headphones if I really want to hear with any sort of fidelity. I think for convenience sake, the cheapest speakers will work fine for a lot of people.

    • @dev.lockridge
      @dev.lockridge Před 2 lety +1

      Honestly, they made it sound incredibly overcomplicated. Find a set of powered bookshelf speakers with good reviews, grab a cable (often included anyways) and you’re set. It’s honestly not harder than getting PC-specific speakers.
      Edifier has some fantastic options that cost a similar amount to decent “computer speakers” but will give you a much better sound!

    • @AhmedBodhi
      @AhmedBodhi Před 2 lety

      @@dev.lockridge dang, looks like they take up quite a bit of space. I wonder what's the best and smallest within the low price range.

    • @dev.lockridge
      @dev.lockridge Před 2 lety

      @@AhmedBodhi edifier r1280t is probably your best bet. I used them for years, I could be wrong but IMO they’re kinda as low as you can go and still get good quality - the bang for your buck here is remarkable, they sound property damn good! My upgrade was literally 3.5x the price.

    • @FlybelFideos
      @FlybelFideos Před 2 lety

      This is what I do. I have a cheap 2.1 speaker set from Logitech that definitely sacrifices audio quality, especially vocal clarity, but it does the job for the rare occasions on which I actually turn them on. Most of the time I put on my headphones, but I also have a TV and a decent Sonos 5.0 surround system right behind my desk so listening to music as well as gaming or watching stuff without headphones are also covered.

  • @kah0922
    @kah0922 Před 2 lety +3

    I've been happy with my Logitech Z506 5.1 surround sound speakers. It's especially nice with games that use 5.1 surround sound (Finding owls in Tales of Arise is so much easier.)

    • @lghdg
      @lghdg Před 2 lety

      Same with my z5500 setup using toslink.

    • @Mr0Tubby
      @Mr0Tubby Před 2 lety +1

      wait until you try speakers that arent made at $5 a piece.

  • @anderseriksson4812
    @anderseriksson4812 Před 2 lety

    I have a good set of active studio speakers but my tip is to look at your closest goodwill and see if they have an old stereo amp to pickup. Sure it will be a bit bigger but the sound can be great if you find one. I have picked up two 80's amps from pioneer and Onkyo for 10-15 $ a piece.
    Together with a pair of used high end hifi stereo speakers (maybe from the same place) it could be a bargain setup for 50-150$

  • @LewisMacDonald22B
    @LewisMacDonald22B Před 2 lety

    I'm still rocking a pair of Creative Gigaworks T40 Series II speakers from about 10+ years ago. The oldest part of my entire setup, survived a house move and were the first major component I bought as a teenager to branch out from the biege everything of my parents computer setup

  • @joaquinneis
    @joaquinneis Před 2 lety +3

    To whoever edited the sound of this video. 10/10

  • @maxiundercover
    @maxiundercover Před 2 lety +7

    I didn't feel like I gained a whole lot by watching this video. My main takeaway is: some PC speakers are bad and they are mostly tuned in a very specific way. So to get better speakers pay more.

    • @ydid687
      @ydid687 Před 2 lety +2

      yeah audiophilia can be as expensive as a exotic car hobby

    • @HckrNeo1
      @HckrNeo1 Před 2 lety +3

      Not necessarily, the budget monitor market these days is offering insane value for money. For

  • @Charles-wu3lh
    @Charles-wu3lh Před 2 lety

    Sound quality on this vid was great!

  • @xCopyCatz
    @xCopyCatz Před 2 lety

    I am running the Edifier s2000db, coming from creative t3, the soundstage is wider but lacking of a delicate subwoofer, just lacks the bass thumping when you are watching movie or even playing game. You can use a dac to enhance the sound to a certain extent or be like me, get a topping d10 and leave it in your desk so that it would look more 'Professional and Neat' and showoff your set-up to your friends. :)

  • @defiantgg1831
    @defiantgg1831 Před rokem +3

    The Presonus Eris 3.5 are small, cheap and sound great.
    A great choice for anyone looking for speakers, pairing with a good subwoofer is a killer combo

    • @Default_Defect
      @Default_Defect Před rokem +1

      Can vouch for this, using these speakers and the sub8 that came in the amazon bundle. Takes a bit of tuning to get the bass to blend just right, but once done it sounds phenomenal.

  • @IdealIdeas100
    @IdealIdeas100 Před 2 lety +3

    I just got an expensive soundbar and called it a day. (Klipsch Cinema 600)
    Sounds great and rumbles my floor!

  • @jens8111
    @jens8111 Před 2 lety

    One thing worth adding to this is the upside to using speakers/ amps with optical audio connections. I have with all my sound setups over the years always had a bit of unwanted noise get from my pc and to my speakers. I tried grounding pc to amp, not having ground, separate power sources, external sound card with separate power source, all I could think of. One day I said enough is enough, got an amp with optical, and grabbed a sound card with optical out. Since then, never had any issues with unwanted noise.

  • @slim617
    @slim617 Před rokem

    Thanks for the info i was looking for

  • @HorrorMayhem
    @HorrorMayhem Před 2 lety +3

    not first

  • @dylanh3712
    @dylanh3712 Před 2 lety +9

    I am pretty sure that every gamer wants the beautiful speakers, but you forgot one BIG thing: gamers are BROKE

  • @jabuki2
    @jabuki2 Před 2 lety

    I use a pair of the jamo bookshelves speakers you showed. They are fantastic. Craigslist can be a great place to pick up a home theater receiver super cheap. I spent twice as much on my sub as I did on the jamo bookshelves. Good sound is a great thing.

  • @R4wF4ce
    @R4wF4ce Před 2 lety

    Highly recommend shopping the used market for some bookshelf speakers and maybe a recent-ish receiver. Great value and also room for upgrades (sub, surrounds, etc.). Also will have a DAC that's probably better than your pc as well. Will take up some space though.

  • @bzoa430
    @bzoa430 Před 2 lety +5

    Oh my days, i'm first

  • @qpdlzjs
    @qpdlzjs Před 2 lety +12

    I don't have speakers and I don't want them

  • @mitjahaller2520
    @mitjahaller2520 Před 2 lety

    Perfect timing!
    I was just looking for new monitors...
    Probability is gonna go with Mackie CR5XBT 👍

  • @LilithTitan
    @LilithTitan Před 2 lety +1

    Still using my audioengine a5+ bamboo's paired with their AE D1 DAC for the last 10 (or so) years and though I was fortunate to snag them at 1\2 off @ Canada Computers back then for about $250, they are to this day IMO still worth the asking price. They are by far my favorite "studio" speakers I've ever used.
    On my sim PC, the $99 EDIFER from Amazon are incredible as well for what you get, but they don't hold a candle to these A5+'s. I'd still go out and pay the full asking price if mine died and the bamboo look is sweet not to mention you get a fuller sound from what I've heard compared to the standards.

  • @TheInternetBanana
    @TheInternetBanana Před 2 lety +5

    Headphone only gang ;)