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  #1  
Old 10-07-2010, 01:57 AM
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Bose 802 for $100. is it worth it?

I was offered one 802 for $100. Is this a good deal? I thought it might make a nice cab for small venues. Any thoughts? I know they were semi popular at one time. Also, when using the 802 as a bass cab, is it necisary to us the Bose controler/eq unit they came with?
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Old 10-07-2010, 06:10 AM
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If the speakers aren't blown, that sounds like a great deal. You don't need the little EQ box. I used one of these a million years ago (and occasionally use one when the sound company has one available at a gig), the little box was the first thing to go.
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Old 10-07-2010, 07:15 AM
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Remember when the hot rig was two 802s and a Walter Woods?
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Old 10-07-2010, 08:39 AM
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I had that rig.

Quote:
Originally Posted by salcott View Post
Remember when the hot rig was two 802s and a Walter Woods?
I used my Walter Woods MI-400-8 with a pair of 802's first with a Underwood pickup and then with a BP-100. Not my favorite sound, but then that's really cheap for that speaker. Most of todays amps and speakers sound infinitely better than the Bose 802 did/does. They take a considerable amount of power to fire up too, not efficent at all. That's the reason that Walter built the MI-400's and MI-600's. because IMHO you can't use a 100 watt amp with an 802. Just my take though.

Ric
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Old 10-07-2010, 03:11 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by blizzard_rw View Post
I was offered one 802 for $100. Is this a good deal? I thought it might make a nice cab for small venues. Any thoughts? I know they were semi popular at one time. Also, when using the 802 as a bass cab, is it necisary to us the Bose controler/eq unit they came with?
Short $$ for a hi-fi amphitheater speaker. They need 200+ watts which shouldn't be hard with a modest size bass amp. My 100 w/channel stereo would not produce descent sound. I sold a pair of 802s ($200 for the pair) & bought B&W speakers for the stereo. Very nice!
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Last edited by 251 : 10-07-2010 at 03:14 PM.
  #6  
Old 10-07-2010, 07:47 PM
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I have these

I have a pair of old 802s and an 802C controller. They have seen better days, but still sound great when I fire them up. The reason they recommend 250-odd watts each is because of the big eq that the 802-c controller applies. Around 16dB at some points. Without the controller, your 802 is going to be ~16dB away from a flat response in some parts of the spectrum.

I had a Behringer DSP1124P feedback controller/multi channel parametric which I was able to program to get very close to the 802C response curve. You might find one of those cheaper than the 802C original.

good luck

Steve
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Old 10-07-2010, 08:58 PM
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There's no way of knowing how long the foam surrounds will last. At that price, I expect it's pretty old.

The empty enclosures do make nice planters.
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Old 10-07-2010, 09:16 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ric Vice View Post
I used my Walter Woods MI-400-8 with a pair of 802's first with a Underwood pickup and then with a BP-100. Not my favorite sound, but then that's really cheap for that speaker. Most of todays amps and speakers sound infinitely better than the Bose 802 did/does. They take a considerable amount of power to fire up too, not efficent at all. That's the reason that Walter built the MI-400's and MI-600's. because IMHO you can't use a 100 watt amp with an 802. Just my take though.

Ric
You know I never had a problem w. my 1982 WW into a Bose 802 w. no EQ and I did big bands, sm. groups you name it....Not my sound now, but I never had a problem. I think the power rating is bogus ... 100 watts is any thing..... WW is clean power.
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