I actually couldn't tell which one is better. Honestly, it doesn't matter which of the 2 pairs you have as long as you're familiar with how a good an a bad mix sounds to them. Even if the other one has a mid or bass enhancement if you use your reference tracks properly which you should regardless, you can still get a better mix. I actually know someone who mixes better in headphones compared to the speakers.
For mixing and mastering HS7 for sure. Plus the mids are very much clear in the HS7. What you mix and master is the oposite of your speakers. So if you have a bassy speakers you add less bass to your mix :( T7V are more prominent in the bass for this I would choose HS7. For listening purposes T7V is a better option.
I have the HS8's and the Adam Audio 7's, The Yams are MUCH louder, but the low end on the Adams is tighter. Also some times the mid range can get a bit much on the HS8's, for the money, and great home studio monitors either of these will def do the job. I do my mixes then A/B these two, I think I like the high end better on the Adams due to their folded tweeter, its a very smooth hi end, it doesnt get harsh louder up. BOTH ARE FANTASTIC.And Thank You for this video, great job.
i think that the track at 5:03 is very useful to differentiate the sound ... the Adam are closer to the original (by the way i still like the original signal better, more openess, presence, realism). Very good track indeed. I am buying the cd. Thanks a lot for such valuable comparison. Kind regards, gino
The HS7 shouldn’t be pleasing at all. You’re missing the point of studio monitors they’re supposed to be completely the opposite what you expect from a hifi speaker to get a good mix.
I want to like the cheaper option....but I find it interesting that the jazz stuff and classical stuff sounds better on the Yamaha's. I think I'll be going towards the Yamaha. I have a feeling they'll be "truer" and won't have as much coloration.
An amazing comparison. Great job, thank you so much. Sorry to say this, but the frequency response shown in the video its not the monitor's frequency response. The graphic shows your room acoustic issue on that monitors.
@@DAIMANization I second that. HS series sound depressing, dull and fatiguing to me. They also smear the mids. HS are not like the NS-10. My only criticism of Adam is that their tweeters are so crisp, powerful, and smooth, they never get sibilant, while most other speakers would if your highs are too loud. A7X are more revealing in the mids and bass than T7V. The Adam woofers are so fast, I can hear when a fast mastering limiter is crushing bass too much--something I can't hear on any other spearker in this price range. The thing that blew my mind about Adam is that I was able to hear 0.5 dB changes in levels of anything in the mix.
@@KarlGutowski J'ai aussi des HS7 depuis longtemps et je confirme, ce sont des Yamaha mais pas des NS10! La réponse en fréquence n'est pas du tout la même. Et je confirme aussi que souvent ça sonne bien sur mon HS7 mais ça ne sonne pas très bien ailleurs ...
IMO, the Adams seem scooped in the mids only when A/Bed to the Yamahas. The less extended response on the basses of the Yamahas makes mids more prominent, at same listening volume, but in the end I find the contents in the mid range to be "almost" identical. Listening on Audio-Technica M40x through an Allen&Heath ZEDi10.
I went through quite a few years of obsessively changing monitors every few months, alesis M1, krk rp6, Samson Rubicon, hs50, Beringer 1030a, presonus Eris e5, hs5. I have realized my best mixes were done in the best sounding room, fairly inependent of which monitors I was using. Once you learn a pair of speakers , you can mix well. It's the room that makes far more difference than the speakers, at least at the sub 400 a pair range. Some of my best mixes were done on alesis m1mk 2. The only thing I notice is basslines were sometimes mixed too quiet in relationship to the kicks, but hay, that's the room, less experience and not referencing on headphones. Yes they are more coloured than more modern monitors but they had a great low end and translated really well. Get the room right and stick to a a pair of speakers that match the room and buy a decent pair of headphones to reference the low end. Ideally I would have a more coloured pair for writing and a flatter midrange focussed more detailed pair like the hs5 for an alternative reference but Im skint!
Adam T7V sound more balanced than the HS8. Seems like my ears wont be fatigued for long with the T7Vs. T7Vs are the clear winner in this battle. Also the T7V sound more close to the original.
Adam audio sounds warmer with slightly more mids. But I also like the sound of the Yamaha. Very transparant and a clear soundstage. Hard to pick a favorite.
Bought the T7V not a regret, there are multiple factors; 1. Ribbon tweeters; less ear fatigue 2. A little more bass; more fun to mix on 3. Looks minimalistic and professional 4. Ribbon tweeters; quick transient response But if I wanted a boring, cheap sounding speaker, sure I would get the hs7, or better yet, I would buy a Logitech computer speakers to mix on. People bought hs7 because of the ns10 which is well-known, they’re both different speakers, and ns10 became famous from marketing.
Fue super duro tu comentario bro xd, pero es la verdad entre los yamaha y los Adams el Adam es mucho mejor que el Yamaha 👌🏻100% me iría por obtener unos Adams
So what I’ve gathered from this comment section is, people who are looking for an effective mixing tool are going to choose Yamaha and people who want a nice warm sounding speaker will prefer Adam. To me the adams sound muddy. With the hs7 the highs are a bit shrill but that just informs me to bury them slightly in the mix and bring out more of the bass
Yamaha Hs7 is perfect for mixing. It allows you to best translate a listen on other speakers, has more detailed midrange, and the voice is decoded better
Listening on my Adam T7V Beyer DT880 phones and Logitech Z5500. I like the sound of the Adam better but it doesn't mean they are better for mixing/mastering, probably the Yamaha HS7 are a better choice although I took the Adam. I use Sonarworks to calibrate for room acoustics plus some additional correction. I used to have Yamaha NS-40m which are great but need a large room. The important thing is to know your monitors and how they translate to different audio formats and sound systems. This can be learned by lots of A/B comparison and by listening to mix on every system possible from crappy to great, in car, boom box etc. By knowing your speakers and correcting room acoustics (sound tratment plus Sonarworks) and setting whatever corrections the speaker has, you can use pretty much any monitor and get good results. It's said of NS-10s that, if you can get a mix to sound good on them then it will sound great on a good system. That's because they have no colouration and are very neutral. I chose the Adam for their overall sound and the excellent ribbon tweeter but they do slightly accentuate between 120hz and 250hz but this can be recognised and corrected during mix. I AB constantly between the Adam and the Logitech system, which I find to be very representative, and I get pretty decent mix results considering I'm not a pro - just trying to be as near as I can! This review is about as good as one could imagine, thanks so much.
I bought t7v a few months ago and I do not recommend for electronic producers, they don't have punch and sound hollow all over, for listening music they're good but the sweet spot is not so large. Big regret...
I have to agree with mateus nunes regarding the fact that T7V sounds more like a HiFi speaker with rather muddy mids and sluggish bass. It would work well for music listetning but for music production there are better choices at this price point and HS7 is one of them IMO
Oh man this is tough!! TV7 - they have more bass presence therefore you have much more control of the low end but the high end is very deceiving. It does sound well but that reduction after 10k hz is very noticable. Yamaha HS7 - the low end feels absent/flat which is good I guess but there is too much difference between the original track and how it sounds on the HS7s. You have to be very careful and precise with your low ends while mixing on the HS7s because if you overdo it, the mix will sound too boomy on other speakers. The highs are very bright and sometimes quite harsh but in no way overly harsh. Definitely organic but I don't know man. It all depends on what kind of music you are going to be making.
The Yamahas tweeter is quite fatiguing after hours of mixing. Very NS10 ish. They are also several hundred more than the Adams. The Adams are also just xlr so you have to but new cables.
From what I noticed there was a slight more apparent low/low-mid response on the T7V's and I would even go as far as to say that the high end on the HS7's is emphasized a little too much, But that's just my opinion based on what I hear
Man I am blown away by the accuracy for the price point these days. Wasnt always like this. They sound more similar to each other than many other monitors in this price bracket which just sound super colored and veiled for the most part. In my opinion, the T7V's won out of the two. HS7's are way brighter than the source material and lack low-end representation and they are also recessed in the upper mid and lower high-end spectrum. But that is not to say the HS7 aren't still very flat and impressive.
what do you mean balanced xD Balance is achieved in the mix? If i have 20db's of volume difference on each instrument you think it still sounds balanced?
@@likemichael8172 I believe he was trying to say "flat" or "linear" - "balanced" is a common adjective used in the home hifi speaker world (as opposed to "hyped", with a frequency boost somewhere) whereas to an engineer it either refers to the mix or to the 3-pole analog electrical connection used to reject noise.
IMO Yamaha's very clear and informative sounding, the HS7 lacks a bit on the lower frequencies. Very good for mixing it seems, but fatiguing for recreational listening I suspect. The Adam T7V total opposite, absolutely not fatiguing sound, sounds very HIFI, but lacked clarity, however better lower frequency extension than HS7, but lacks 'tightness'.
i listen on hs7's , adam's seem warmer, richer, slightly enhanced and clearer in the lows, low mids are certainly profoundly higher , and highs seem to have more body and are less harsh , but equally clear as the yamahas... i would like to try these maybe.
A7X clearly way better but they cost way more. T7V is the best ''BUDGET'' monitor. No other monitors in that price range offers as much, Depending what part of the world you live. Price will vary between budget lines... Think in the UK T7V best budget monitors. They offer you everything you need in a budget monitor for the price.
@@EricRyanSound Definitly brought a pair for less than £300 had the option of Kali lp-6 And t7v but I picked the T7V felt they were overall better sounding. Ribbon technology on them is well good. Pristine top end on them monitors, Great Bass. 7 inch drivers, Ribbon Tweeters, Adds so much air to the top end that its just such a pleasant listening experience. Never experienced that before I heard an Adam monitor, They have such a nice sound that I can only associate it with other Adam products, There just simply isn't a monitor with that sound signature that I have heard.
The pleasure to listen to good frequencies from nice speakers is really far from the truth! Calibrate them for your control room is the key then, u should hear the details, the definition from the speakers, so you can decide which one is perfect for your ears. Try it before buy!
Wow those room nodes Your room appears to only be decently flat between 1Khz and 3Khz. Pretty big issues at 150hz and below. Seems these tests, while excellently put together with the inclusion of the charts, would be far more powerful with some better room treatment. TL:DR these results would be a lot closer and easier to disseminate in a better treated environment.
I had the T7Vs and I sent them back very fast. Incredible boomy with no definition in the mids. Afterwards, same room, same treatment, I bought the Yamahas HS8, and I couldnt be happier, what an incredible speakers. I was very skeptical and afraid that they don't have enough low end, thats why I ordered the HS8 instead the HS7. Huuuge decision!
Also the real test is to try them when your tracking/mixing in your studio setup. When listening to pro mixed and mastered music, Adams are slightly better listening experience, but when your are creating sound from scratch, thats when you notice a lot of problems. For me, its hard to create good sound with Adams for example on distorted guitars (and I know how my gear usually sounds and translates to different devices), and when mixing it doesnt give a lot of space it seems, everything gets a little muffled. Pair this with uncontrolled low end, no notch on volume pot, when you try to change HF and LF settings you bumb the knob because its so close, only XLR input, much lover volume than Yamahas, you get a clear winner in my opinion (and I have both speakers ar disposal and have compared them). Just my two cents, I understand why would someone like Adams, im just not that person ✌
I'll stick to my Yamaha msp 5... as I'm using for 2 decades n my ears r set to for a good mix.. I gave a hear to Adams It's good.. Once ur done with one gadget...it takes time to get accustomed with others..all r good... depends on a persons listening issues..Thnx 4 d nice review.
Both are good monitors to choose. We all have different taste. I have t7v in my home studio but i also have hs7 in my main studio, so i can tell they have their pros n cons. In my opinion Hs7 is flatter, whic is good for detailed mixing. That doesn't mean t7v are shits. I love my t7v because, in my personal taste they sound warmer and fuller, which is for me very pleasant to hear.👍
I was watching this and suddenly during the Full Speed song I realised I can't hear the snare reverb on either of the speakers, only on the original track. It just hit me how inaccurate these comparisons are, even with the speakers placed in a perfect triangle with the mic and me wearing headphones. They can give you a good idea of some of the differences in the sound profile between the two speakers but I wouldn't recommend to anyone to buy them based on these videos alone.
I compared bunch of Studio Monitors,and WE TALKING STUDIO MONITORS not system for listening regular music,coz i hate when people say:Ooo this are more balanced but if you wanna mix and master,,,bla bla bla ,,,,well that why we have this comparison for mixing and not for listening regular music.Lets get to the point.Yamaha’s in the price range,wins any competition IN MY OPINION.It’s hard to beat it.Very true in your face.And just because of that purpose i sold my new JBL8 and thinking,is it really worth spending extra money for Adam a7x or just get on this Yamahas
thx for test, i´am a little bit surprises, without Response pic TS7 sounds more natural as the Hs7 and not to much high and ok maybe bit to much bass but this is for non professional speaker really good, the response show ok 2 things on 3.2k and 4.2k but i thing that is still good. HS7 is HS7 and many people make good music with this speakers.
The adam audio are slightly better, very well balanced, hs7 got a bit of a boost on the mids, but it's sooo close that the major think now is the price.
Seems like the HS7 are seriously flat, and are better a mix due to the fact that they are very flat. The T7V sound warmer, and the HS7 are just super raw! They just give it to as it is. And the flatter the sound the better the mixing (My opinion). I will buy the T7V as secondary monitors, and keep my HS7 as primary..
The original sounds sound always better than the 2 monitors, is that due to sounds recorded from the monitors were in open air and depending on the room condition which has less reverbation, while the original sounds were sent directly and digitally from flac into the video? Is that correct?
The bottom line: " Digital Stereophony: I have to agree with mateus nunes regarding the fact that T7V sounds more like a HiFi speaker with rather muddy mids and sluggish bass. It would work well for music listetning but for music production there are better choices at this price point and HS7 is one of them IMO "
HS7 clearer more realistic with great soundstage good vocals (better for monitoring) | T7V darker deeper sound (like in a box) with small soundstage ,vocals overshadowed by the bass (enjoyable for casual listening in bassy songs,not necessarily better ) , the yamahas are the clear winners for me
I have serious doubts... What think the author of the video about which is more appropriate to produce 90% metal and rock (instrumental), 5% classical arrangements, 5% retro wave?. Would really appreciate an opinion. by the way, great video!
Just listened to this video on t7v and... Yeah, they are way better then yamaha... yamaha has harsh on high frequencies and too high mediums... Sounds like a real good radio
I almost bought a pair of Yamaha NS10's in the late 1970's but they were almost painful to listen to for extended periods so I bought a pair of ESS AMT IB's instead, so why bring that up now....because the choices given here are updated versions of what I was comparing 40 years ago.
Both really good monitors this one going boil down to personal preference . Adams better response on the low end , Yamaha definitely more of a flatter mid range speaker . Yamaha is good value for money.
Yamaha's seem more harsh and hallow, while the Adam's seem more natural sounding and more pleasant. It's got to be the tweeter, I'm sold on the Adam's. I'm Listening on Polk Audio 45B speakers and a Yamaha YST-SW305 Sub, Creative Soundblaster with the Bur Brown Audiophile Chips, going to a pioneer receiver.
That sub is old but one of the best purchases I have made, 20 years almost and the thing still pounds, had to make a rubber gasket for the amp a year ago with some weather stripping, it was vibrating and i lost lower bottom end at higher volumes. If the AMP is not sealed the bass response is lost do to the Sub enclosure design.
I kinda crazy but the adams is a speaker I would enjoy listening to music on. But for mixing I like the Yahama sound cause it just clear. Feel the adams is adding, like bass. Were the Yahama isn't you "hear" the bass and effect your trying to get. The Adams gives you that bass on it own. It's suttle for sure . But I would rather mix on the Yahama then listen on the Adams lol. The Adams is warmer. Little deeper sound the Yahama is bright, clear crisp. With bass that you hear rather than feel if you know what I mean.
Adams have the edge. The sweet spot would have to be more exact with ribbon tweeters though. They don't have dispersion as wide as a dome, but less distortion.
I’m listening through JBL headphones. Adams have a High range edge on clarity. Yamahas have a nice Mid Range edge. Yamaha seems a tad more reverby than Adams. Snares/Claps definitely pop more in Yamaha compared to Adams. They both sound good, but have subtle differences. Also can you do a post mix Left/right version of then then we can do balance l/r into mono comparison.
The highs on T7V with the ribbon tweeter are painful to listen to for any length of time. Don't even think about Adam if you have any level of tinnitus. I tried to listen to them for a few hours in my room, my head started hurting and I returned the monitors back to the store.
Really interesting thank you for the comparison, to me the Yamaha's are really fatigueing to listen to, I would hate to mix on these all day with what sounds like accentuated mid-range, though their bass is tighter and not as boomy as the HS7s. Ultimately the T7Vs sound closer to the original mix.
T7v sounds the most congruent with the original track on my sound system which I would assume means that mixes translate better from the T7v's than the HS7's. I brought home a pair of HS8's one time and didn't know wtf I was hearing. The EQ curve was smiley and the treble was painful. The HS7 in the video sounds much thinner than the original track, much how I remember the sound of the HS8's.
So if you wanna do EDM TRAP go for tv7. If you want idk other genres go with hs7. I used to have Yamaha msp7 the discontinued. Those are the best midrange controlling speakers in my opinion. Better then A77X or anything else. IF i would do reggaetón hip hop or trap i will go with Adams. More low end control is necessary nowadays.
Okay so like I was really struggling on this decision, and what I think you want is the hs8’s honestly it’s 50$ more and u will get solid low end and honest mid and high. Don’t get Adams intel you can buy the 1000$ pairs that are actually good. If you get yamhas your mix will sound good on every speaker.
people are comparing the speaker to the other, what you should be doing is listening for how it translates from the original song to the speaker T7V are more close the hs8 is lacking the bass
T7V gets my vote... I'm actually looking between these two. And on almost all samples, eyes closed... I open them when I feel the sound is to my liking... low end, mids, clarity vocals and the T7V is the open I chose each time. For example, on I never felt this good before, comapre the original reference track and the T7V and the standup bass is almost on the same level... thxs.
Original sound is just the audio direct. The two monitors on the other hand are recordings of the monitors playing in his room. This is why the big difference between original and hs7/t7v. So you’re not hearing the monitors so much as you’re hearing his room. In other words, if you did the same test in your room, we’d have a different outcome.
Ok I actually have the Hs7's along with some alesis 5's. In this video the adams have got a warmer and crisper high end and the yamaha high end sounds forced at times as well as thin. The adams low end did sound more substantial than the yamaha, but I'm not sure if thats just a "rokit' type thing or not. 😆 Ive heard the adam a7x in person and they are very decent. 🦾 When I can afford it I'd be looking at the focal sm9 and also yamaha sn10.
A year later update... 😂 Got rid of hs7 and alesis 5's, I have alesis M1 MK2 65's which have helped me immensely with their clear and concise sound. Now I'm gonna get Adam a3x to replace my 5's and either alpha 65's or Adam t7v for my main set as they will do for the time. (Keeping the old school mk2's though) 🥃
This is a monitor speaker, the main objective is sound “close to the source” .. not to sound to what’s you like ! Adam is more closer than Yamaha which is a bit bright, sharp to me 😊 but even Adam .. just need a little bit more in low mid 250-500hz 😅
I think just the same for listening to music Yamaha is better suited, you must understand, the amazing middle and informative high frequencies (by the way, not at all bright!) make listening fun, at low volumes a lot of details are revealed. I had wonderful Presonus Eris E5s, but they play very formal, boring .. And Yamaha immediately involves.
When I listen to this video I don't listen to the Yamaha or the Adam… I listen to the B&W plugged in my DAC… So what is the sens of such a demonstration????
Listening to the difference on my $10 ear buds
Hahahahahahhahahahaa
🤣🤣
lol
😂😂😂😂😂😂
😂😂😂
Listening to the difference on my Adam Audio T7V
same!
U idiot...
@블링크원스hoho great
doing the same on my yamahas
😛😂😂😂
This is the only channel that doesn't offer subjective opinion. No talking, all listening. Let the listener decide. Fucking awesome comparison format.
Response graphs and original tracks are really great additions. Thanks a lot!
I actually couldn't tell which one is better. Honestly, it doesn't matter which of the 2 pairs you have as long as you're familiar with how a good an a bad mix sounds to them. Even if the other one has a mid or bass enhancement if you use your reference tracks properly which you should regardless, you can still get a better mix. I actually know someone who mixes better in headphones compared to the speakers.
T7V sound more like what you will hear in headphone which is similar to original soundtrack
For mixing and mastering HS7 for sure. Plus the mids are very much clear in the HS7. What you mix and master is the oposite of your speakers. So if you have a bassy speakers you add less bass to your mix :( T7V are more prominent in the bass for this I would choose HS7. For listening purposes T7V is a better option.
to that point if u mix on mid focused speakers u will subdue them compared to the rest of the range
Mastering on hs7? That's a joke
@@heythere6983 yes
@@joshsmith7812 if you don't have anything better
@@leirumanuel that is not what mastering is though
I have the HS8's and the Adam Audio 7's, The Yams are MUCH louder, but the low end on the Adams is tighter. Also some times the mid range can get a bit much on the HS8's, for the money, and great home studio monitors either of these will def do the job.
I do my mixes then A/B these two, I think I like the high end better on the Adams due to their folded tweeter, its a very smooth hi end, it doesnt get harsh louder up. BOTH ARE FANTASTIC.And Thank You for this video, great job.
КАК РАЗ 3 ДНЯ НАЗАД ЗАКАЗАЛ АДАМ Т7V. СПАСИБО ЗА ВИДЕО.
THANK YOU. ADAM BEST.
i think that the track at 5:03 is very useful to differentiate the sound ... the Adam are closer to the original (by the way i still like the original signal better, more openess, presence, realism). Very good track indeed. I am buying the cd. Thanks a lot for such valuable comparison. Kind regards, gino
The hs7 have a crisper high mid that I don't find very pleasing but they're good. But the presence in the adams are extremely good
The HS7 shouldn’t be pleasing at all. You’re missing the point of studio monitors they’re supposed to be completely the opposite what you expect from a hifi speaker to get a good mix.
I want to like the cheaper option....but I find it interesting that the jazz stuff and classical stuff sounds better on the Yamaha's. I think I'll be going towards the Yamaha. I have a feeling they'll be "truer" and won't have as much coloration.
An amazing comparison. Great job, thank you so much. Sorry to say this, but the frequency response shown in the video its not the monitor's frequency response. The graphic shows your room acoustic issue on that monitors.
HS7 is for full time mixing use. Not processed, "ready", sound. Mix with it will sound great everywhere after.
Yamaha are well cynical sounding. Where Adam is way nicer listening experience and they're still cynical.
@@DAIMANization I second that. HS series sound depressing, dull and fatiguing to me. They also smear the mids. HS are not like the NS-10. My only criticism of Adam is that their tweeters are so crisp, powerful, and smooth, they never get sibilant, while most other speakers would if your highs are too loud. A7X are more revealing in the mids and bass than T7V. The Adam woofers are so fast, I can hear when a fast mastering limiter is crushing bass too much--something I can't hear on any other spearker in this price range. The thing that blew my mind about Adam is that I was able to hear 0.5 dB changes in levels of anything in the mix.
@@KarlGutowski
J'ai aussi des HS7 depuis longtemps et je confirme, ce sont des Yamaha mais pas des NS10! La réponse en fréquence n'est pas du tout la même. Et je confirme aussi que souvent ça sonne bien sur mon HS7 mais ça ne sonne pas très bien ailleurs ...
Yamahas sound harsher to me.. I preferred the warmth in the Adams
Well put
Me too
rockn roll I’ve used both
rockn roll + the t8v’s are also out now
@@5.126 so, you have both.. which one do you recommend more ? i am new in this monitor speaker journey..
IMO, the Adams seem scooped in the mids only when A/Bed to the Yamahas. The less extended response on the basses of the Yamahas makes mids more prominent, at same listening volume, but in the end I find the contents in the mid range to be "almost" identical.
Listening on Audio-Technica M40x through an Allen&Heath ZEDi10.
I went through quite a few years of obsessively changing monitors every few months, alesis M1, krk rp6, Samson Rubicon, hs50, Beringer 1030a, presonus Eris e5, hs5. I have realized my best mixes were done in the best sounding room, fairly inependent of which monitors I was using. Once you learn a pair of speakers , you can mix well. It's the room that makes far more difference than the speakers, at least at the sub 400 a pair range. Some of my best mixes were done on alesis m1mk 2. The only thing I notice is basslines were sometimes mixed too quiet in relationship to the kicks, but hay, that's the room, less experience and not referencing on headphones. Yes they are more coloured than more modern monitors but they had a great low end and translated really well. Get the room right and stick to a a pair of speakers that match the room and buy a decent pair of headphones to reference the low end. Ideally I would have a more coloured pair for writing and a flatter midrange focussed more detailed pair like the hs5 for an alternative reference but Im skint!
Adam T7V sound more balanced than the HS8. Seems like my ears wont be fatigued for long with the T7Vs. T7Vs are the clear winner in this battle. Also the T7V sound more close to the original.
Adam audio sounds warmer with slightly more mids. But I also like the sound of the Yamaha. Very transparant and a clear soundstage. Hard to pick a favorite.
Definitely easier to hear what works and what doesn't work in the mixing when hearing from the T7V's in my opinion. I think that'll be my next buy :))
Bought the T7V not a regret, there are multiple factors;
1. Ribbon tweeters; less ear fatigue
2. A little more bass; more fun to mix on
3. Looks minimalistic and professional
4. Ribbon tweeters; quick transient response
But if I wanted a boring, cheap sounding speaker, sure I would get the hs7, or better yet, I would buy a Logitech computer speakers to mix on. People bought hs7 because of the ns10 which is well-known, they’re both different speakers, and ns10 became famous from marketing.
Fue super duro tu comentario bro xd, pero es la verdad entre los yamaha y los Adams el Adam es mucho mejor que el Yamaha 👌🏻100% me iría por obtener unos Adams
So what I’ve gathered from this comment section is, people who are looking for an effective mixing tool are going to choose Yamaha and people who want a nice warm sounding speaker will prefer Adam. To me the adams sound muddy. With the hs7 the highs are a bit shrill but that just informs me to bury them slightly in the mix and bring out more of the bass
Yamaha Hs7 is perfect for mixing. It allows you to best translate a listen on other speakers, has more detailed midrange, and the voice is decoded better
hs8 is more balanced imo. going by these videos
Went with the T7V after many hours of testing and comparison. Price point is perfect.
how's the bass? are you satisfied with the bass?
T7V perfect for edm punchy kick
Looking at this a year later, would you say you like them for mixing high ended music like rock?
@@DarkPa1adinAdams have "tighter" bass than the Yamaha's, I have both.
The Adams are surprisingly low end punchy, its a good thing.
Which of the two do you think are better for listening to music, like female voices?@@RogwinMusic
Listening on my Adam T7V Beyer DT880 phones and Logitech Z5500. I like the sound of the Adam better but it doesn't mean they are better for mixing/mastering, probably the Yamaha HS7 are a better choice although I took the Adam. I use Sonarworks to calibrate for room acoustics plus some additional correction. I used to have Yamaha NS-40m which are great but need a large room.
The important thing is to know your monitors and how they translate to different audio formats and sound systems. This can be learned by lots of A/B comparison and by listening to mix on every system possible from crappy to great, in car, boom box etc. By knowing your speakers and correcting room acoustics (sound tratment plus Sonarworks) and setting whatever corrections the speaker has, you can use pretty much any monitor and get good results.
It's said of NS-10s that, if you can get a mix to sound good on them then it will sound great on a good system. That's because they have no colouration and are very neutral.
I chose the Adam for their overall sound and the excellent ribbon tweeter but they do slightly accentuate between 120hz and 250hz but this can be recognised and corrected during mix. I AB constantly between the Adam and the Logitech system, which I find to be very representative, and I get pretty decent mix results considering I'm not a pro - just trying to be as near as I can!
This review is about as good as one could imagine, thanks so much.
you are not wrong bro ... I have HS7 at home and after 30min I stop mixing .... i have ear fatigue ....
I bought t7v a few months ago and I do not recommend for electronic producers, they don't have punch and sound hollow all over, for listening music they're good but the sweet spot is not so large. Big regret...
I have to agree with mateus nunes regarding the fact that T7V sounds more like a HiFi speaker with rather muddy mids and sluggish bass. It would work well for music listetning but for music production there are better choices at this price point and HS7 is one of them IMO
Said it all, clear and honest .Good job brother 👍
@@DSAUDIOreview
Thanks for the input.
I was just about to buy them, guess I‘ll compare a little more first
@@DSAUDIOreview What would you recommend at that price range ? Is Kali Lp-6 or new KRK G4 better for home studio then Yamaha HS7 ?
Digital Stereophony what else do you recommend?
Oh man this is tough!!
TV7 - they have more bass presence therefore you have much more control of the low end but the high end is very deceiving. It does sound well but that reduction after 10k hz is very noticable.
Yamaha HS7 - the low end feels absent/flat which is good I guess but there is too much difference between the original track and how it sounds on the HS7s. You have to be very careful and precise with your low ends while mixing on the HS7s because if you overdo it, the mix will sound too boomy on other speakers.
The highs are very bright and sometimes quite harsh but in no way overly harsh. Definitely organic but I don't know man. It all depends on what kind of music you are going to be making.
The Yamahas tweeter is quite fatiguing after hours of mixing. Very NS10 ish. They are also several hundred more than the Adams. The Adams are also just xlr so you have to but new cables.
From what I noticed there was a slight more apparent low/low-mid response on the T7V's and I would even go as far as to say that the high end on the HS7's is emphasized a little too much, But that's just my opinion based on what I hear
The high's on the HV7 was too much?? HS is known for that boss. What are you listening on?
Man I am blown away by the accuracy for the price point these days. Wasnt always like this. They sound more similar to each other than many other monitors in this price bracket which just sound super colored and veiled for the most part. In my opinion, the T7V's won out of the two. HS7's are way brighter than the source material and lack low-end representation and they are also recessed in the upper mid and lower high-end spectrum. But that is not to say the HS7 aren't still very flat and impressive.
That’s exactly what you want though. It shouldn’t sound good.
I really feel the Adams are more balanced sounding.
what do you mean balanced xD
Balance is achieved in the mix?
If i have 20db's of volume difference on each instrument you think it still sounds balanced?
@@likemichael8172 I believe he was trying to say "flat" or "linear" - "balanced" is a common adjective used in the home hifi speaker world (as opposed to "hyped", with a frequency boost somewhere) whereas to an engineer it either refers to the mix or to the 3-pole analog electrical connection used to reject noise.
me feel the same
You feel it through the loudspeakers plugged to your computer… lol
true
IMO Yamaha's very clear and informative sounding, the HS7 lacks a bit on the lower frequencies. Very good for mixing it seems, but fatiguing for recreational listening I suspect. The Adam T7V total opposite, absolutely not fatiguing sound, sounds very HIFI, but lacked clarity, however better lower frequency extension than HS7, but lacks 'tightness'.
the original tracks sounds the best :)
yeah I will buy them...
them are more immersive as that shit of t7vs.... CHECKMATE
JBL LSR 308 or 305P MKII are more close to source track.You should listen them.
i listen on hs7's , adam's seem warmer, richer, slightly enhanced and clearer in the lows, low mids are certainly profoundly higher , and highs seem to have more body and are less harsh , but equally clear as the yamahas... i would like to try these maybe.
Aesthetically, the yamahas are wonderful.
True
Adam's might sound more warm but Yamaha hs7 sounds more organic and true
Fucking A to a T...
Please T7v vs A7x
Absolutely!!
A7X clearly way better but they cost way more. T7V is the best ''BUDGET'' monitor. No other monitors in that price range offers as much, Depending what part of the world you live. Price will vary between budget lines... Think in the UK T7V best budget monitors. They offer you everything you need in a budget monitor for the price.
I agree. T7V is the best monitor under 500$ per available
@@EricRyanSound Definitly brought a pair for less than £300 had the option of Kali lp-6 And t7v but I picked the T7V felt they were overall better sounding. Ribbon technology on them is well good.
Pristine top end on them monitors, Great Bass. 7 inch drivers, Ribbon Tweeters, Adds so much air to the top end that its just such a pleasant listening experience.
Never experienced that before I heard an Adam monitor, They have such a nice sound that I can only associate it with other Adam products, There just simply isn't a monitor with that sound signature that I have heard.
I wish we had a comparison of A7X, HS7, T7V and Rokit 7 G4 as a Xmas present : )
The pleasure to listen to good frequencies from nice speakers is really far from the truth!
Calibrate them for your control room is the key then, u should hear the details, the definition from the speakers, so you can decide which one is perfect for your ears. Try it before buy!
Yamaha had excellent high!
Wow those room nodes Your room appears to only be decently flat between 1Khz and 3Khz. Pretty big issues at 150hz and below. Seems these tests, while excellently put together with the inclusion of the charts, would be far more powerful with some better room treatment.
TL:DR
these results would be a lot closer and easier to disseminate in a better treated environment.
I had the T7Vs and I sent them back very fast. Incredible boomy with no definition in the mids. Afterwards, same room, same treatment, I bought the Yamahas HS8, and I couldnt be happier, what an incredible speakers. I was very skeptical and afraid that they don't have enough low end, thats why I ordered the HS8 instead the HS7. Huuuge decision!
The HS8 only has 5hz more than the HS7 lol
The HS8 only has 5hz more than the HS7 lol
Also the real test is to try them when your tracking/mixing in your studio setup. When listening to pro mixed and mastered music, Adams are slightly better listening experience, but when your are creating sound from scratch, thats when you notice a lot of problems. For me, its hard to create good sound with Adams for example on distorted guitars (and I know how my gear usually sounds and translates to different devices), and when mixing it doesnt give a lot of space it seems, everything gets a little muffled. Pair this with uncontrolled low end, no notch on volume pot, when you try to change HF and LF settings you bumb the knob because its so close, only XLR input, much lover volume than Yamahas, you get a clear winner in my opinion (and I have both speakers ar disposal and have compared them). Just my two cents, I understand why would someone like Adams, im just not that person ✌
I'll stick to my Yamaha msp 5... as I'm using for 2 decades n my ears r set to for a good mix..
I gave a hear to Adams
It's good.. Once ur done with one gadget...it takes time to get accustomed with others..all r good... depends on a persons listening issues..Thnx 4 d nice review.
Both are good monitors to choose. We all have different taste. I have t7v in my home studio but i also have hs7 in my main studio, so i can tell they have their pros n cons. In my opinion Hs7 is flatter, whic is good for detailed mixing. That doesn't mean t7v are shits. I love my t7v because, in my personal taste they sound warmer and fuller, which is for me very pleasant to hear.👍
Which one would you go with for mixing in a smaller room?
@@JaredSchumaier HS7
I was watching this and suddenly during the Full Speed song I realised I can't hear the snare reverb on either of the speakers, only on the original track. It just hit me how inaccurate these comparisons are, even with the speakers placed in a perfect triangle with the mic and me wearing headphones. They can give you a good idea of some of the differences in the sound profile between the two speakers but I wouldn't recommend to anyone to buy them based on these videos alone.
I compared bunch of Studio Monitors,and WE TALKING STUDIO MONITORS not system for listening regular music,coz i hate when people say:Ooo this are more balanced but if you wanna mix and master,,,bla bla bla ,,,,well that why we have this comparison for mixing and not for listening regular music.Lets get to the point.Yamaha’s in the price range,wins any competition IN MY OPINION.It’s hard to beat it.Very true in your face.And just because of that purpose i sold my new JBL8 and thinking,is it really worth spending extra money for Adam a7x or just get on this Yamahas
There's a lot to talk about taste, but I'll say when it comes to the Yamaha I always get to listen to things that I don't in others.
T7v más completa en todas las frecuencias. Aunque las Yamaha no suenan mal , las noto más difusas..buen trabajo
los yamaha tienen menos bajos, aparte son mas chillones, no creo que sea bueno para sesiones largas
thx for test, i´am a little bit surprises, without Response pic TS7 sounds more natural as the Hs7 and not to much high and ok maybe bit to much bass but this is for non professional speaker really good, the response show ok 2 things on 3.2k and 4.2k but i thing that is still good. HS7 is HS7 and many people make good music with this speakers.
The adam audio are slightly better, very well balanced, hs7 got a bit of a boost on the mids, but it's sooo close that the major think now is the price.
Adam Audio more transparent and more warmth at the same time. Yamaha very midrangey and harsher. Both ok though. Depends on the room of course.
Seems like the HS7 are seriously flat, and are better a mix due to the fact that they are very flat. The T7V sound warmer, and the HS7 are just super raw! They just give it to as it is. And the flatter the sound the better the mixing (My opinion). I will buy the T7V as secondary monitors, and keep my HS7 as primary..
Seems like you are seriously deaf 😂😂
Thats what I did.....its a nice compliment.
Is this audio recorded through a stereo mic or is it EQ processing of the source track based on measurements of their frequency response?
This is a REALLY well-done video, thanks! (And I think I'll definitely stick with my T7Vs, based on what I hear here!)
Legend has it they mixed and justice for all on the Yamahas
Haha I got it ! Thx Jason who?
Never heard him !
Look at that ribbon-tweeter action in higher frequencies. Thanks for the graphs.
The original sounds sound always better than the 2 monitors, is that due to sounds recorded from the monitors were in open air and depending on the room condition which has less reverbation, while the original sounds were sent directly and digitally from flac into the video? Is that correct?
somebody can have a great final mix with the HS7 ?
The bottom line: " Digital Stereophony: I have to agree with mateus nunes regarding the fact that T7V sounds more like a HiFi speaker with rather muddy mids and sluggish bass. It would work well for music listetning but for music production there are better choices at this price point and HS7 is one of them IMO "
HS7 clearer more realistic with great soundstage good vocals (better for monitoring) | T7V darker deeper sound (like in a box) with small soundstage ,vocals overshadowed by the bass (enjoyable for casual listening in bassy songs,not necessarily better ) , the yamahas are the clear winners for me
I have serious doubts... What think the author of the video about which is more appropriate to produce 90% metal and rock (instrumental), 5% classical arrangements, 5% retro wave?. Would really appreciate an opinion. by the way, great video!
Just listened to this video on t7v and... Yeah, they are way better then yamaha... yamaha has harsh on high frequencies and too high mediums... Sounds like a real good radio
I auditioned these. Ended up with HS8s. Happy. High's were to silky smooth. More revealing.
I almost bought a pair of Yamaha NS10's in the late 1970's but they were almost painful to listen to for extended periods so I bought a pair of ESS AMT IB's instead, so why bring that up now....because the choices given here are updated versions of what I was comparing 40 years ago.
Both really good monitors this one going boil down to personal preference .
Adams better response on the low end , Yamaha definitely more of a flatter mid range speaker .
Yamaha is good value for money.
Adam TV7's are $250 each.
Yamaha's seem more harsh and hallow, while the Adam's seem more natural sounding and more pleasant. It's got to be the tweeter, I'm sold on the Adam's. I'm Listening on Polk Audio 45B speakers and a Yamaha YST-SW305 Sub, Creative Soundblaster with the Bur Brown Audiophile Chips, going to a pioneer receiver.
That sub is old but one of the best purchases I have made, 20 years almost and the thing still pounds, had to make a rubber gasket for the amp a year ago with some weather stripping, it was vibrating and i lost lower bottom end at higher volumes. If the AMP is not sealed the bass response is lost do to the Sub enclosure design.
I kinda crazy but the adams is a speaker I would enjoy listening to music on. But for mixing I like the Yahama sound cause it just clear. Feel the adams is adding, like bass. Were the Yahama isn't you "hear" the bass and effect your trying to get. The Adams gives you that bass on it own. It's suttle for sure . But I would rather mix on the Yahama then listen on the Adams lol. The Adams is warmer. Little deeper sound the Yahama is bright, clear crisp. With bass that you hear rather than feel if you know what I mean.
Adams have the edge. The sweet spot would have to be more exact with ribbon tweeters though. They don't have dispersion as wide as a dome, but less distortion.
Thats not true. The Adam have no small sweetspot!
I’m listening through JBL headphones. Adams have a High range edge on clarity. Yamahas have a nice Mid Range edge. Yamaha seems a tad more reverby than Adams. Snares/Claps definitely pop more in Yamaha compared to Adams. They both sound good, but have subtle differences.
Also can you do a post mix Left/right version of then then we can do balance l/r into mono comparison.
but isnt the low end of the adams much more? i miss that extremly on the yamahas... here it with my beyerdynamic..
Interesting-I was going to go Yamaha until this video. Core issue is how close the replay is to the original track. The Adams are closer.
The highs on T7V with the ribbon tweeter are painful to listen to for any length of time. Don't even think about Adam if you have any level of tinnitus. I tried to listen to them for a few hours in my room, my head started hurting and I returned the monitors back to the store.
Really interesting thank you for the comparison, to me the Yamaha's are really fatigueing to listen to, I would hate to mix on these all day with what sounds like accentuated mid-range, though their bass is tighter and not as boomy as the HS7s. Ultimately the T7Vs sound closer to the original mix.
Adam more natural sound in warm , Yamaha more clean and clear
I agree with that.
T7v sounds the most congruent with the original track on my sound system which I would assume means that mixes translate better from the T7v's than the HS7's. I brought home a pair of HS8's one time and didn't know wtf I was hearing. The EQ curve was smiley and the treble was painful. The HS7 in the video sounds much thinner than the original track, much how I remember the sound of the HS8's.
which is better t7v or the t8v? did you return them?
So if you wanna do EDM TRAP go for tv7. If you want idk other genres go with hs7. I used to have Yamaha msp7 the discontinued. Those are the best midrange controlling speakers in my opinion. Better then A77X or anything else. IF i would do reggaetón hip hop or trap i will go with Adams. More low end control is necessary nowadays.
What would be a sweetspot model between these pairs of Adam and Yamaha?
Nice what you are doing. I wish you would have a reference mic for this. Cause there are importent frequencies missing in opposit to the originals.
Based on a crappy compressed YT stream, the HS7 wins hands down.
Okay so like I was really struggling on this decision, and what I think you want is the hs8’s honestly it’s 50$ more and u will get solid low end and honest mid and high. Don’t get Adams intel you can buy the 1000$ pairs that are actually good. If you get yamhas your mix will sound good on every speaker.
But you might have to work more to get there....have had the yamahas for about a year, def takes a bit , getting used to them.
people are comparing the speaker to the other, what you should be doing is listening for how it translates from the original song to the speaker T7V are more close the hs8 is lacking the bass
YES
A HONEST COMMENT
GREAT JOB, THANK YOU
Please share the name of the artist who recorded the song called "Long Drive." I would love to hear more from that artist. Thank you.
Yes I can’t find it anywhere.I love this song. Please reveal the artist and or soundtrack
Yamaha HS7 vs Adam Audio A7V would be interessting ;-) Could you do a compare ?
T7V gets my vote... I'm actually looking between these two. And on almost all samples, eyes closed... I open them when I feel the sound is to my liking... low end, mids, clarity vocals and the T7V is the open I chose each time. For example, on I never felt this good before, comapre the original reference track and the T7V and the standup bass is almost on the same level... thxs.
What is used to get the original sound?
Original sound is just the audio direct. The two monitors on the other hand are recordings of the monitors playing in his room. This is why the big difference between original and hs7/t7v.
So you’re not hearing the monitors so much as you’re hearing his room. In other words, if you did the same test in your room, we’d have a different outcome.
4:06
Ok I actually have the Hs7's along with some alesis 5's. In this video the adams have got a warmer and crisper high end and the yamaha high end sounds forced at times as well as thin. The adams low end did sound more substantial than the yamaha, but I'm not sure if thats just a "rokit' type thing or not. 😆 Ive heard the adam a7x in person and they are very decent. 🦾 When I can afford it I'd be looking at the focal sm9 and also yamaha sn10.
A year later update... 😂
Got rid of hs7 and alesis 5's, I have alesis M1 MK2 65's which have helped me immensely with their clear and concise sound. Now I'm gonna get Adam a3x to replace my 5's and either alpha 65's or Adam t7v for my main set as they will do for the time. (Keeping the old school mk2's though) 🥃
This is a monitor speaker, the main objective is sound “close to the source” .. not to sound to what’s you like ! Adam is more closer than Yamaha which is a bit bright, sharp to me 😊 but even Adam .. just need a little bit more in low mid 250-500hz 😅
I would say Yamahas have a more linear sound, while the Adams sound louder in the mid and high ranges.
Agree. The Yamaha have a more clearer sound stage and transparency.
who is the artist that made "Deep" at 1:51?
thx
Song playlist is linked in the description
I think just the same for listening to music Yamaha is better suited, you must understand, the amazing middle and informative high frequencies (by the way, not at all bright!) make listening fun, at low volumes a lot of details are revealed. I had wonderful Presonus Eris E5s, but they play very formal, boring .. And Yamaha immediately involves.
The zoom recorder is not great for replicating their sound FYI
Great job! Any chance to do the Event Opals?
Listening with my chassis speaker on my 486. They sound like bit-perfect.
I'd listen to music on the Adam's and mix on the Yama's
When I listen to this video I don't listen to the Yamaha or the Adam… I listen to the B&W plugged in my DAC… So what is the sens of such a demonstration????
I think the Adam sounds tighter but maybe a bit more ear tearing
Yamahas sound harsh on the high-end
So do you, buddy!
Ya no talk shit bout my Yamahas!
so true ...
THanks!