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I have used the stanton decks, and the main disadvantage imo with them was the pitch is wildly inaccurate, there are parts of the +/-10% which are you simply cannot get to meaning you will often have to pitch the live track to get the cue track matched. Also the speed of the deck may shift a little bit after you have already cued up the next track (annoying). Also, the torque was quite poor, a lot of records will just stop completely under your hands, but you will get used to it and learn how hard you need to push the record etc, it just takes a bit of practice.
I haven't mixed on the numark decks but I would guess they may have some of the same problems (correct me if i'm wrong, cheap decks are cheap decks), but if 300 quid is all you can pay for a full package i guess both would serve you adequately.
Also, as other people will probably mention, learn to mix on either of these and you'll be in heaven with better equipment if you decide to upgrade later on.
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