pauldownton1979 said:
oh heck i've started something here..... thanks for the advice. so to answer a few questions..
I listen to most types of music, i like finding new stuff everyday, alot of it under the radar ( hence spotify comes in useful ) mostly i listen to rock music.
the system will be setup in my front room. I'm about 6 - 7 feet from the listening position, as my room is long and narrow. the speakers will be either side of my standard size fireplace, and they will only have about 6" space to the wall. as for the spotify question, i have actually gone premium for 3 months because they have a deal on.
someone mentioned the powered speaker with slave set up - which please forgive my not knowing sod all ... was what i was thinking of in the way of active speakers, so sorry for that, but like others have alluded to the only ones i can find seem very small and set up for computer desks, which is definitely not what im looking for. The last speakers i had were castle pembrokes which as some of you know - are massive stand mounts, and they sounded great till one died of old age
i dont know much about the monitor studio speakers you speak of, would there be somewhere i could demo them ?
Thanks again for the input.
Sorry for stirring up the argument but you were, and still are, being told rubbish.
So I will try and explain as clearly as I can, apologies for starting with the simple stuff.
To get the best sound from a computer you need a dac, probably usb, an amplifier and some speakers. In 'purist' hi-fo terms this would be all separate components, but when you realise that the bigest single cost in dacs and amplifiers is the casework, separating everything becomes unreasonably expensive.
So, given a £500 budget it makes sense not to buy stuff you do not need. Ie if you are only going to use a computer as a source (for the foreseable future anyway) then you do not need all the facilities of an integrated amp, particularly all the input switching and the volume control, why spend money on them?
A simple usb dac, ideally asyncronous, is all that you need at this point, obviously you need amplifiers so build them into the speakers and save money.
Now this can be done in two different ways, firstly you can take a normal pair of (passive) hi-fi speakers, build in a stereo amp, often with a dac, into one of them and link the 'master' speaker to a 'slave' using a length of speaker cable. Do that right as with the Q Acoustics or the Audioengine and you end up with a nice, complete solution that is essentially plug and play.
Secondly you can look at 'fully active' speakers, these are fundamentally different in that an electronic crossover is used followed by separate amplifiers for each drive unit. This is more expensive than 'powered' speakers but it is no coincidence that top of the line models from speaker companies like ATC and PMC use this configuration.
There is a difference in the sound between active speakers and 'hi-fi' speakers, which I described in rather flowery language in my earlier post, some people like the difference and much prefer the active approach.
I'll leave it there for the moment, but to give you an idea of the quality of the Yamaha, take a look at this....
http://uk.yamaha.com/en/products/music-production/speakers/hs_series/hs8/?mode=model
Feel free to ask any questions, i'll do my best.