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Can I monitor my car in the basement, from my unit?
I live in a block of flats and park my car in the basement, on the 2nd level down from the groun floor. My car has been vandalised twice and Floor Monitor now I'm anxious to somehow monitor it so I can catch the people responsible.The tricky part is, it's the lower-level basement, where mobile phones and FM reception doesn't work. Probably because of the thick slabs of concrete.Is there some kind of monitoring device that can detect motion or record video and *somehow* send it back up to my flat so I can constantly monitor it?
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ok if your using XP right click on desktop, properties, last tab (cant remember what its called, then there should be a slider thingy slide it to the right for the highest quality(non blurry
Vista: right click desktop, Personalize, Display Settings, then slide all the way to the right.ur done!
I don’t think so.
yes, both help the singer to be able to hear the backup band so they can stay in tune and on beat.
well, if the mixing board has 1/4″ outputs then use them,from the main speaker outputs directly to the speakers. with the passive monitors, you’ll have to get a seperate amp to power them, so you run them from an output on the mixer to the amp, then from the amp to the monitors.
No, you couldn’t use it as you described.This monitor is not powered. It has a 400 watt rating, but no built in amp. And even if it was powered, it wouldn’t sound any good as a guitar amp anyway.Floor monitors are meant to be used as way to hear you and your bandmates better on stage during a live performance. It’s done by feeding a signal from the mixing board, which has all of the instrument/mics volume and EQ levels controlled, to a monitor in front of each musician so they can hear the entire mix better.
no u can’t directly, but a tv tuner will work for you.
I’m thinking maybe a cheap old computer with a webcam? Maybe Radio Shack would have something cheap. Baby monitors are like $150.
How many amps you need for this system depends on a few things. Namely, the impedance of the speakers and the minimum load impedance of the amp(s).If you don’t need to run the mains in stereo, you could get by with using a 2 channel amp. Run the mains on one side, and the monitors on the other. That gives you the ability to run a separate mix for the monitors (if you mixer can do that…which most can), and run the monitors at a different level than the mains (a necessity).If you need to run the mains in stereo, then you’ll need 2 amps.Good luck.Greetings from Austin, TXKen
Hi Mark,There should not be any problems since your monitor can support a higher outpout than your Yamaha amp.I don’t know in witch condition you will use that monitor (studio-practice, stage ?) the important is not to go over 7.5 in volume, past that it will create distortion, especially if you have added FX.
What you need is a wireless Personal monitor w/ headphones. The sound guy will have to plug in a line level monitor feed to the send unit – then you wear the reciever (it has a volumn control) with headphones. Nady makes one for $270. I don’t think there’s any good way to take a speaker level feed – you could get a DI box with a pad (so it can take speaker level) and then run the output to a headphone amp – but that seems like more trouble and it may load the monitor system more than is wise.Our drummer uses a Nady and it’s never been a problem for a sound guy to plug a monitor feed into it. Sometimes they can even give you your own separate mix.
As I and several others have told you repeatedly – there is no such thing as a tame Nile Monitor.You’re trying to make him tame by putting him through something that is obvious uncomfortable and stressful for him – this is going to lead to a large, aggressive lizard that absolutely HATES everything about you.You need to stop trying to make him tame and settle for how he is, compared to others he is pretty good but that will change quickly if you persist. A human-Nile Monitor relationship is one where the human feeds, cleans up after, and gives up an entire room to house the lizard, who in return at best tolerates the human and (usually) does not attack them.Your persistence in trying to ‘tame’ this lizard, and your continued ignoring of our answers tell me you are not nearly responsible or mature enough to handle a lizard of this magnitude. I think you should try and find a new home for this little one before it gets any larger and sends you to the hospital.