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Where to set LED's
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slojo
Hi everyone.

I've just seen a post on a DJ help video website where the DJ was chastised for having the LED's in the red when mixing - it was a DJM600 - and only set at +4dB (which is still in the red) rather than peaking to +12.

I do the same, figuring the 8dB 'headroom' as he calls it is enough to catch any sharp transients without causing distortion - but I wondered what the actual parameters are for setting the mixer properly.

I've got the output from the mixer set to the amp so it doesn't peak, and I've got the output to the inputon the computer so it doesn't peak/distort - so surely that's fine? Or if you have the input level on the DJM too high - or the output level too high (even with the screw on the back turned down) - does this create internal distortion?

I'd think no, as my mixes sound ok (apart from the mixing, lol) but I was just wondering what the general concensus was on where to set LED's.

I guess there's maybe a difference between recording and live settings? I only say that as some of the clubs I've been to and looked into the booth, the LED's never shift out of maximum, let alone get INTO the red!!

Any thoughts?

Slojo
djxtension
I always set them at 0dB when i'm recording or mixing at home.

In a club, it's often a little harder to do, but i definately make sure i stay out of the red. Just a security measure, in case i do blow up some speakers or something...

And i do think - depending on the soundsystem - playing at 0dB makes a difference in sound quality.
Stu Cox
The 8dB of headroom on the DJM600 (or any mixer for that matter, although the amount of headroom does vary) basically means that you can go up to 8dB over the standard 0dB level without the output signal distorting.

This does, however, not necessarily guarantee that the signal won't distort on the INPUT of whatever you're feeding. This is usually an amp, which generally have a fair amount of input headroom, but it may be a computer soundcard input which often have no headroom at all - as soon as it hits 0dB the signal distorts. Most clubs set their limters to 0dB, so this also means that as soon as you go into the red very harsh compression will be applied which can sound pretty horrible very quickly.

As a result, I'd always recommend trying to stay out of the red no matter where you're playing - even if it doesn't make a difference on your home setup, it's good practice to get into so that you'll naturally avoid it when you play out or just on another setup.



Blowing up speakers shouldn't be an issue though, unless whoever set up the club system was a complete dingbat - if the amps are matched to the speaker power ratings and impedances, they shouldn't be able to blow them, particularly if there's a limiter before the amp (which there always should be in a professional setup).
KiNeTiC ENeRgY
Some mixers actually sound best when the levels are in the red, and I want to say the Pioneer is one of those. I can do that with my Rane Empath with no issues whatsoever. It also depends on the system it is running through and how it is set up.
miamitranceman
Yeah, I run the 600 into one or two reds.
RJT
On a semi-related note, nothing makes me more frustrated as a DJ than when whomever is working the sound at a club demands you basically play all the way in the red. It happens at some of the largest clubs in Chicago, and just drives me crazy when I get up there, play in the green or one yellow, and they still want more sound coming out of the mixer. I can literally hear the monitors go from being crisp and clean to getting muddy as , all in the name of volume.

I just wish clubs of the size I'm referring to ("mega" clubs) actually had both trained sound techs as well as the capacity to amplify the sound cleanly post-mixer.

Wishful thinking to be sure. :(
Invasionmix
quote:
Originally posted by KiNeTiC ENeRgY
Some mixers actually sound best when the levels are in the red, and I want to say the Pioneer is one of those. I can do that with my Rane Empath with no issues whatsoever. It also depends on the system it is running through and how it is set up.


Yeah a sound tech guy told me Pioneers sounds best at 1 red. So I always play around there.
DJRecess
Hmmm. Slojo, are you on about me? Not wanting to sound narcissistic I've just had a comment posted on my YouTube channel about this very thing. Apparantly, it 'hurt his soul' that I played in the red.

How sweet.

I have my system setup so that everything sounds great at +4db in the red. Any less and I find Pioneer mixers -the 600 anyway- has a poor signal to noise ratio through the breakdowns when recording. I just calibrate the entire system with 1Khz tone going into a channel at +4db - set the master output to +4db, and check that the PPM meters get an input of 6PPM. If I'm any more than 4dB, the PPM's start to light up like Christmas, so I know never to play louder.

In clubs - I ask what they do normally, and just follow suit. Bur you wouldn't believe the amount of places that have a 600 and DON'T know there's a screw on the back which limits/increases the mixer output level.

Who knows though, maybe all these years I've been doing it wrong. Never played in a club that kept it at 0 though, nearly all pushed 7db, and many crashed right over.

Anyway, those are my thoughts - are they wrong? Should I be a soul destroyer?
starboy
I'm always in the red with pioneers, usually a couple.
palm
get a new mixer.

DJRecess
quote:
Originally posted by palm
get a new mixer.


That's a bit uncalled for...
Zild
Yes for some reason the idiots at Pioneer decided that it would make better sense to run their DJM 600 mixers in the red (maybe because most DJs are idiots and run them hot anyway). Not that they sounded very good to begin with. Most decent to good mixers sound great at 0 all the way up to +10 or so. I usually try to keep my mixes peaking at 0 but sometimes I'll go up to 2 when something loud hits or I make a slight mistake mixing.
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