All a monitor is, is a speaker that's between the size of a satellite and a floorstander. A bookshelf speaker is also known as a standmount monitor. Although most of the times, when people say monitors, they are referring to powered monitors which the term for amplified speakers that mixing engineers use, also known as studio monitors.
A tweeter is a high frequency driver.
A horn is a type of baffle waveguide used typically for tweeters, but can also be used for midrange drivers (see Klipsch Palladium).
Horn and monitor...what exactly where you researching OP, the Chase PRO-10s?
Heh, yes. It basically just means it doesn't go all the way down to the floor."Bookshelf" is often a very loose definition so be sure to check the dimensions of the speaker. For instance my JBL S38's are 11-1/2" x 17-1/2" x 12-7/8" and weigh 28lbs each.
"Bookshelf" is often a very loose definition so be sure to check the dimensions of the speaker. For instance my JBL S38's are 11-1/2" x 17-1/2" x 12-7/8" and weigh 28lbs each.
"Bookshelf" is often a very loose definition so be sure to check the dimensions of the speaker. For instance my JBL S38's are 11-1/2" x 17-1/2" x 12-7/8" and weigh 28lbs each.
Horn = one possible shape of a driver (literally, like a horn. I have some speakers with horn tweeters. My brother's Guitar amplifier has a pair of horn speakers (full range).)
not exactly. A horn is something a tweeter is mounted in. usually a compression driver instead of something more exotic, but you can, for example, have a horn loaded ribbon tweeter as well.
Horns aren't only for tweeters though.
And then is itself wrong? Yeah, that never gets old.I love it when a post starts with "there is a lot of misinformation here..."