$250 Computer Sound


Recently the crappy speakers my computer came with bought the farm, and now I'm in the market for new ones. I know computer speakers (especially cheap ones) are notoriously crappy, but as a teenager with little income I'm just not willing to spend more than about $250 for a complete audio solution.
I've read up on this stuff for a few days and it seems like there are a few tears of PC-audio. Bottom of the barrel are the <$80 computer speakers. Then there are a few speaker systems in the $90-$180 range that cater to people who want "good" audio from a computer but still don't really approach mid-fi quality. Then, apparently one could get decent audio from a computer by using external amplifiers with mid or hi-fi monitors and eschewing the crappy "multimedia" speakers usually passed off on computer users. Is it possible that I could put together a decent system like that for under two or three hundred dollars?

I think the answer is going to be no, so my next question is which of the $90-$180 2.1 computer speakers is the best? I know they all suck relative to the stuff talked about here, but please humor me. The Altec Lansing 621's can be had for around $100. Is the %70 price increase upgrading to Klipsch Promedia 2.1's (at $170) going to yield a comperable performance increase? These two systems look like my top choices. Anybody have suggestions? Thanks.
patrickfwdb231
My son bought the Logitech surrounds (4) and a sub for $200.I have been very surprised by the quality of the sound.
alan
I ditto what Nikturner920 mentioned about Monsoon Audio. I have owned the MM-700s for over 3 years and I have played the hell out of them. They have good size sub, planar technology (somewhat directional sound -need to find the sweetspot). and they are made in Canada (at least back then). I have seen Monsoon Audio advertise on eBay before for new old stock units. The newer sub $100 Monsoons are not worth trying. You really want the MM-1000 or MM-2000.
I just hooked up a new computer sound system using the Sound Blaster Audigy 2 Platinum and Monsoon PlanarMedia 14 speakers. The speakers were $140 and the card $175. The Monsoons sound great. The midrange is clean and open, good extension in to the high range, and they even image well. The sub will need a little work in placement, but I've only had the system for two days. Give the planars about 24 hrs breakin. These speakers sound great at low typical listening levels, but they sound even better cranked.

This combo is vastly superior to minisystems such as the Denon DM series, which I have in my baby girl's room. I probably will throw a PC based system using Monsoons up there and tie it into the home network and just use wave files on the server instead of a CD player.
Hey,
I have the Promedia 5.1's which are incredible, but also know that the 2.1's sound utterly fantastic for they're price. Id recommend these over anything else, Logitech, Monsoon's or Altecs cause i know from listening that they're better
nOrh has a new Soundcard that is suppose to best anything out there.M-Audio Revolution 7.1 card or the M-Audio Sonica Theater PCI version,read the second paragraph from their news page and there is a pic of the HT card down the page.Klaus of Odessy bought one so he was impressed with it.
http://www.norh.com/news.html