Lysander
Rock Star
- Messages
- 3,119
My search for a compact FRFR for home noodling took long enough until i realized: hey, why not use a Bluetooth speaker for the job? Good ones are flat enough, loud and inexpensive.
So i ended up buying a mint-condition used Marshall Acton III for the job. This is one of Marshalls new novelty Bluetooth speakers (yuck...), but it's actually of surprising good quality: well built, quite full sounding for its size, balanced, and can be pushed surprisingly loud without speakers farting. Serves the purpose wonderfully for home modeller use, and i suspect it might even sound better than cheaper dedicated alternatives such as Headrush's FRFR-Go.
Bluetooth audio has very high (~50ms) latency on this device, but what interested me is that it has an 3.5mm AUX in. Signal still goes through a simple DSP, but wired latency is reportedly ~1ms. I haven't bothered to measure it myself yet, but i cannot sense any sort of latency when plugged in via a cable, to the point i suspect that figure is low enough to just be measurement error.
What sucks is that... there's no 1/4" input, which is a bit weird for a Marshall product. So, i just hacked my own
So i ended up buying a mint-condition used Marshall Acton III for the job. This is one of Marshalls new novelty Bluetooth speakers (yuck...), but it's actually of surprising good quality: well built, quite full sounding for its size, balanced, and can be pushed surprisingly loud without speakers farting. Serves the purpose wonderfully for home modeller use, and i suspect it might even sound better than cheaper dedicated alternatives such as Headrush's FRFR-Go.
Bluetooth audio has very high (~50ms) latency on this device, but what interested me is that it has an 3.5mm AUX in. Signal still goes through a simple DSP, but wired latency is reportedly ~1ms. I haven't bothered to measure it myself yet, but i cannot sense any sort of latency when plugged in via a cable, to the point i suspect that figure is low enough to just be measurement error.
What sucks is that... there's no 1/4" input, which is a bit weird for a Marshall product. So, i just hacked my own

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