Fender 1270p powered monitor manual




















Change shipping region. Listing Ended. If you watch the listing, we'll notify you if it becomes available again. Shipped From. Preferred Seller Quick Shipper.

Message Seller. Secure Checkout At Reverb, your safety and security is our priority. About This Listing Fender P powered stage monitor in excellent condition minor scuff marks from normal use. Perfect working order.

Recently serviced. Filter caps replaced. Monitor has zero hum. Includes power cord. Reviews of this Shop. Product Specs Listed 6 years ago Condition Excellent Used Excellent items are almost entirely free from blemishes and other visual defects and have been played or used with the utmost care. Page 4 1 1 2 2 7 7 0 0 P P Powered Monitor delivers the professional quality and performance that has established Fender as a respected leader in the music industry for over 50 years. The self-powered version of the stage monitor, your Page 6 1 1 2 2 7 7 0 0 P P proporciona la calidad y caracter sticas de sonido profesionales que han otorgado el reconocimiento mundial de Fender en la industria musical durante m s de 50 a os.

Hermano mayor del monitor personal de escena , el Print page 1 Print document 8 pages. Rename the bookmark. Delete bookmark? Thanks, that makes sense. I don't think the Dual Mains would need to be used in this place hopefully. It's small and it's a happy hour gig, so it's not going to be too loud anyway. I haven't tried it yet of course And I have never heard of feedback problems relating to cheep monitors. Does anyone know why this is so? Floor monitors are in a relatively bad location This proximity increases the likelihood of feedback.

If the speaker has smooth response, less equalization is needed and gain can be maximized. Thanks again for the advice. I ended up getting the Peavey 12M monitor. So now I have one final question about hooking all of this up. The bar is set up now with the Peavey XR powered mixer, with both back outputs wired to both speakers. I understand I have to power my monitor with one of those outputs now and daisy chain the speakers off the other output.

However, I was wondering if instead of using a daisy chain, could I instead use an adapter such as this one? The reason I considered this, aside from not knowing what I'm doing, is because since the setup is pre-wired it may be easier to use an adapter than undoing the cables that are secured and running to both speakers.

But of course I'm not sure if the adapter would even work or not. I looked for the speakers but I couldn't find them online. They're old Peaveys of some sort. On the back they have what read as two inputs. So I guess I'm not sure if I can daisy chain them or not.

What are the rules to daisy chain two passive speakers from a powered mixer? Daisy-chaining is parallel witing so your impedance drops when you connect two or more together. That's the main thing to remember. Don't go below the amp's minimum allowable impedance. BTW, in my small 2-piece band guitar, bass, vocals, programmed drums we each use our own Crate Power Block amp to power our own monitors.

Just right to power a decent little wedge. I usually set it on top of the sub on my side and it allows each of us to have a little bit of our own tone and volume control. They are parallel inputs Y-cords for speakers suck! The Peavey can handle 2 8 ohm speakers on each power amp each output on the back The problem with paralleling off a main speaker is you're getting exactly what the house mix is, and there's no way to control the level.

If the house EQ and volume is right for the audience the monitor could be quite loud and EQ'd in such a way that there is a good chance of feedback without separate control. Well if I didn't post so late in the game I'd highly recommend a powered monitor. With that you can be independant of whatever PA situation they have at each club.



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