Hehe, I also am in the same position as you two, and need a mixer with as many as possible aux sends (for using fx units).
After doing some research and reading lots of reviews, what stayed on top of my list (I have not fully decided yet) was the Mackie 1642 VLZ3 for ~500EUR, which is a lot of money, but will be sufficient as your midibox machine park grows :).
Also, it offers quite good value for the money, lots of channels, quite compact design, the equalizer section is very good, has 4 aux sends, very decent overall sound quality…
16 channels may sound like overkill, but when you have a MB-6582, you have 8 input channels alone (if you do not passively mix them together), add one or two stereo synths and one or two fx machines and you need them all…
16 channels may sound like overkill, but when you have a MB-6582, you have 8 input channels alone (if you do not passively mix them together), add one or two stereo synths and one or two fx machines and you need them all…
Yep, 16 channels is what seemed logical to me when i was considering buying a mixer recently.
This mixer is cheap and supposively has excellent eq and mic pre’s:
I have used many “small” desks over the years but for a recording or small live situation, I always take my Yamaha O1v96v2
It is small enough to carry with relative ease and with external pre-amps (and a bit of creativity) will support up to 40 inputs!
My personal favourite very small desk (because I have had it for many many years) is a Mackie 1402 (again not VLZ). Built like a tank and sounds fine for a small desk.
+1 for for a digital mixer. I use an Old TM-D1000 16 channel and the flexibility of it compare to an analog one is amazing. I can set up my routing, eq, dynamics, save it as a patch, unplug it from the computer and I am off to the show! You can get the fabulous DM-24 for under a grand used.
Hi Attitude, yes I have a Tascam TM-D1000 as well (with the external TDIF to ADAT convertor). I still love that desk but whenever I use it I miss the motorized faders of the 01v96
Hawkeye, my personal take is that the Mackie construction started to be a bit “cheaper” with the newer desks. I have no real evidence to back that up, just my opinion!
Another digital option is the Behringer DDX3216. It was basically a copy of the 01v and each XLR input includes a TRS insert, they seem to fetch about £300 on Ebay, they received some pretty good reports back in the day, SOS did a review back in 2002 http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/apr02/articles/behringerddx3216.asp
I Love my Mackie CR 1604. Analog Baby! The old ones should go for around $100 bucks. It’s built like a tank, a managable size and sounds great! (maybe a little old school noise) Plenty of aux send ands returns. There is an issue with the main outputs (try google and RTFM!) if you are using balanced outputs the tip and the ring are reversed so you have to switch them on your cables, but that is not a problem for any of you tech savvy midi boxers :sorcerer:
The VLZ and the VLZ Pro don’t have this problem though. Good Luck!
I should mention the problem with the behringer is no headroom. I can’t speak for all of them but I have the Xenyx 802 (that is my submixer for the MB6582) and there is absolutely no headroom. Not to mention crappy sounding Eq compared to my Mackie. I didn’t notice it when I didn’t have anything else, but after I brought it out of retirement to submix for my SID synth, I notice a big difference.
thankyou for the infos. the 1604 was one of my past thought..
my problem with the bheringer was the mute button and the sound, compared to a mackie with a good speaker you can ear the difference in my opinion. the button mute problem was the click that this generate when you push it during liveset :\
I have a Mackie LM-3204, sixteen stereo channels in 5U rackspace.
Great for when you need lots of channels in a small amount of space and don’t need 50 dB mic preamps.
I also have a couple of Samson line mixers (PL-2404, 1602) which aren’t as “loud” as the Mackie, but are good for proper +4 dBu line level signals. And have faders for each subgroup.
Another digital option is the Behringer DDX3216. It was basically a copy of the 01v and each XLR input includes a TRS insert, they seem to fetch about £300 on Ebay, they received some pretty good reports back in the day, SOS did a review back in 2002 http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/apr02/articles/behringerddx3216.asp
I actually bought a ddx3216 this weekend, but on closer inspection afterwards there is a crackle coming from the output - any output,
regardless of what input is used, even the built in tone generator has a crackly sound coming through the output.
I’m hoping its just a PSU issue (and not a dreaded DAC issue), and speaking of PSU that is primarily where the corners have been cut to make it affordable.
There are many reports online of PSU’s failing.
This thread is a beautiful resource though, on upgrading the op amps, and later on in the thread; re-capping all caps in the PSU:
If the X32 lives up to the hype then it does look like a great desk, I had better start saving Judging by the picture, they obviously haven’t quite finalized the design yet…
Sorry to hear that your DDX3216 is poorly, from what I have heard, they are usually pretty reliable so hopefully it is just a simple PSU issue?
If the X32 lives up to the hype then it does look like a great desk, I had better start saving Judging by the picture, they obviously haven’t quite finalized the design yet…
Sorry to hear that your DDX3216 is poorly, from what I have heard, they are usually pretty reliable so hopefully it is just a simple PSU issue?
Cheers
Phil
After a while of messing around, the crackle seemed to disappear.
The only real notable changes i made was changing the sample rate from 44.1khz to 48khz, and rebooted.
Edit: I can confirm that it must be a warm up issue - the crackle totally disappears after about 20 mins after the mixer is on.
Still a great mixer though, well worth the money,
i almost payed the same price for a new DJX-700 way back when they came out, and this is a lot more mixer!
The headphone output can be noisey also, the desk is well worth buying and spending the money saved on upgrading caps and op-amps.