

Klipsch director of product development for personal audio. We want to keep it that way with or without wires," said Don Inmon, It's been known to put some home stereo systems to shame, and "The ProMedia is still the defacto 2.1 standard for computer THX-certified original, only the Klipsch logos are silver instead ofĬopper. The new ProMedia 2.1 Wireless looks and sounds like the The classic setup by introducing a wireless version. But given the increase in laptopĪnd notebook usage, company officials decided to put a fresh spin on The years it has become one of the highest praised, best-selling The original ProMedia 2.1 system was introduced in 2000, and over But now theyĭon't have to thanks to the wireless technology Klipsch has added to And surprisingly enough, many of them will accept theirĬomputer's poor sound performance just to stay mobile. People use laptops and notebooks to listen to music, watch movies and INDIANAPOLIS, IN (November 4, 2009) Today more and more New twist on award-winning system conveniently brings better sound to laptop and notebook users If I play at max spl in my garden, the sound level is so loud that you need to escape to the other side of the main building if you don't have hearing protection on.Klipsch Puts Wireless Spin on Popular ProMedia 2.1 Computer Speakers That's partly because I use an active filter to filter the lowest bass away from the monitors and partly because they have a bi amp + a protection circuit stopping you from burning the tweeter. I can play so loud that the tools from my garden shed start to drop from the walls - without risking to kill the monitors.

I myself use a pair of Behringer 2030A speakers combined to a 2,5 kilowatt amp + horn loaded 18" compression woofer (cheap, I know - but it's only for random fun not pro stuff). You can get models up to kilowatt range that will let you deaphen your whole family before the tweeter blows. You have only two options to fix your situation (and by this I mean to preent you from breaking yet another speaker set):Įither play at lower sound levels or buy a proper active speaker set. When you try to play music louder than your amplifier is rated for, the sound starts to distort, compressing the output heavily and the end result is that the tweeter gets fed several watts of continuous audio power instead of the 1-2 watt peaks it's designed for.

The tweeter blows when you expose the tweeter to a distorted sound.
