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firstly, for the most part, you can ignore harmonic mixing for techno. its very very very rare that a track you select will sound shit because its out of key, mainly because 90% of techno has no key.
but yeah, there is no real right or wrong way of doing it. but certainly with techno, eq work is essential because a lot of tracks sound cluttered when combined with other tracks if you don't tone down some EQ's. play about to find your feet, swap channel eq's about, swapping one tracks mids for another tracks mids and then keeping the highs from the first track while swapping the bass from the next track.. etc etc
its especially important to keep on top of your eq's if you are playing multiple tracks. its very easy to make 3 deck mixing sound shit, even if the beatmatching is spot on, by over-doing the highs or mids. this is where knowing your tunes comes in, knowing what to blend with what and which elements of the tracks to use. when having 3 tracks in, i always try to keep the highs down, maybe all 3 are on 4/5 or something, just enough to take the edge off.
as far as crossfader use, although people will (quite rightly) tell you to use what you feel most comfortable with, i am a firm believer that you should use the tools for the job they have been designed for. i.e. a crossfader is for cutting, switching and fast scratch action, faders are for controlled introduction and removal of sound (and maybe a little cutting). so in essence, i would always use the upfaders to bring a track in or out and only use the crossfader for cutitng switching etc. would you use a spanner to do a screwdrivers job? 
definitely concentrate on your eq work though, you can make those clashy mixes sound a lot better by using the eq's to full extent. this coupled with good track selection should move you forward with your mixing 
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MUGGETS
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