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For All You Rotary Lovers - Answer Me This...... (pg. 2)
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| Ryan0751 |
Actually he's right, at least with the classic style rotaries (Bozak, Urei, Rane). The gain structure of these mixers is designed that they sound best when you leave bit of headroom and max out around 6-8.
And in the case of a Urei or Bozak, you don't have gain control... so the headroom you leave yourself IS the gain (if you need it).
| quote: | Originally posted by Progress Ent.
There is no way to say that. Every sound system is different. |
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| Progress Ent. |
| The sound of the mixer doesn't change no matter what kind it is based on the gain. All that changes is the intensity of the signal. It's the sound system that distorts based on how much it can handle. |
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| Ryan0751 |
You need to do some more research...
| quote: | Originally posted by Progress Ent.
The sound of the mixer doesn't change no matter what kind it is based on the gain. All that changes is the intensity of the signal. It's the sound system that distorts based on how much it can handle. |
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| nchs09 |
| quote: | Originally posted by Jarvmeister
Actually, I've just mixed on my 'standard' 800 again, and I've noticed something. If I wanted to fade in from 0 using the rotary method by twisting the trim then I'd not be able to hear the cued track in the phones.
Suppose I've just managed to effectively disagree with myself. Awesome. | parad0x |
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| tubby |
| quote: | Originally posted by Jarvmeister
Not sure that would give me the control I get from faders, it's to sharp.
But I've been thinking. If you had 2 CDJ1000s which have a phono and digital out, with a 4 channel mixer like the 800 for example, if you had a hybrid rotary on channels 1 and 2 and linear on 3 and 4 you could get the best of both worlds. You hook the digital of CDJ1 to channel 1 and the phono to channel 3. And follow the same process for the second CDJ to channel 2 and 4.
It's not going to happen though is it?! |
phono out on a cdj? anyway, you could split the output. The rotary kits on djms could easily be put in 2 channels and the other 2 left linear, all you'd need is to get any metal working shop to make you a face plate. |
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| Jarvmeister |
| quote: | Originally posted by tubby
phono out on a cdj? anyway, you could split the output. The rotary kits on djms could easily be put in 2 channels and the other 2 left linear, all you'd need is to get any metal working shop to make you a face plate. |
Hmmm, I'd rather just buy one off the shelf, and even then it's not a huge priority.
Oooops! I meant RCA, not phono. |
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| Stu Cox |
Gains aren't really designed for performing the mix with. Not necessarily saying you can't use them to fade in/out but there are a lot of advantages to using that to set the overall level, so that when your fader (or channel rotary knob) is at max the track plays at the right level, consistent with other tracks in your set. Unless you've got really good monitors, it can be hard to judge what level the right level is when mixing a tune in.
So my advice is always to set the gain before you start mixing at track in, then do all other levels on the faders/rotaries. Using the gain to fade out isn't such an issue as you don't need to 'remember' where it was after that, but generally (not always, but generally) using the gain to fade in isn't particularly good plan. |
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| abletonlive05 |
| rotary mixers suck ass. try this you wanna have smooth transitions then center the crossfader and then adjust the volume or fade in the tracks. if you spin trance and want to have something really freaking smooth get a scratch mixer, it may not have effects but the volume controls are not so gradual. in other words the second you adjust the volume it literally jumps halfway up in volume. I used to make some of the smoothest mixtaps ever heard using a scratch mixer and using my ears and sometimes adjusting the gain so that it would be perfectly mixed. I had some whitelabels not mastered right and would sometimes have to boost it up a bit. |
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| Zild |
| quote: | Originally posted by Progress Ent.
There is no way to say that. Every sound system is different. |
It doesn't have anything to do with the sound system. It has to do with the way the gain structure is setup on those older mixers. |
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| Zild |
| quote: | Originally posted by nchs09
parad0x |
That's why you mix between 6 and 8. You can still hear the music since your headphones have independent volume control, but it isn't loud enough to clip the gain on the master channel. Or you could go a little lower as long as it doesn't clip the master channel. Use your ears and the VU meter. Also turn down the headphone volume periodically after turning the gain up so you don't go deaf. |
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| skip |
| quote: | Originally posted by abletonlive05
rotary mixers suck ass. try this you wanna have smooth transitions then center the crossfader and then adjust the volume or fade in the tracks. if you spin trance and want to have something really freaking smooth get a scratch mixer, it may not have effects but the volume controls are not so gradual. in other words the second you adjust the volume it literally jumps halfway up in volume. I used to make some of the smoothest mixtaps ever heard using a scratch mixer and using my ears and sometimes adjusting the gain so that it would be perfectly mixed. I had some whitelabels not mastered right and would sometimes have to boost it up a bit. |
so basically
worse = better
in your opinion? :conf: |
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| abletonlive05 |
| quote: | Originally posted by skip
so basically
worse = better
in your opinion? :conf: |
depends on taste, some mixers are going to take some getting used to.
what I would look for in a mixer -
1) effects
a) filter sweep
b) autopan
c) flange
2) channels - two channels is fine with me
3) make sure the changes that you make to the EQ are not reflected in the headphones - this sucks, great for a novice DJ because they can think things blend better. |
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