NEW Console for Live Performance and Studio Recording
Musical Instruments, Drum Set, speaker Studio Recording
$ 2000.0 Pieces Min Order Quantity 2 Unit
- Required Quantity
-
- Place of Origin
- South Korea
- Payment Terms
- MoneyGram,Others,T/T,Western Union
- Production method
- Available
- Shipping / Lead Time
- Negotiable / Negotiable
- Category
- Musical Instruments
KOREA TRIAXLE CO.,LTD.
- Verified Certificate
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1
Product name | NEW Console for Live Performance and Studio Recording | Certification | - |
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Category | Musical Instruments | Material | - |
Keyword | musical instruments , musical instrument amplifiers , lighting & studio , studio monitors | Unit Size | - |
Brand name | - | Unit Weigh | - |
origin | South Korea | Stock | 10000 |
Supply type | Available | HS code | - |
Product Information
Behringer X Series
The X32 had a profound effect on the live music scene, and arguably did more than any other mixer to convert the lower echelons of live sound over to digital. For the price of a decent analogue board, small venues and gigging bands could enjoy flying faders, virtual soundchecks, LCD scribble strips, remote stageboxes, personal monitor mixers, and more. Like the StudioLive range, the X32 series has expanded to cover a number of different form factors, like the compact Producer edition and various rackmounting options. More recently, Behringer have also launched the intriguing Wing mixer, which also looks to have recording applications.
Soundcraft Ui24R
As live engineers started patrolling their venues with iPads, some bright spark started to wonder whether mixers needed a control surface at all. And then someone (possibly the same person) went further, and asked if we couldn't just hide all the mixer stuff inside a stagebox, chuck a WiFi router in there for good measure, and banish stage snakes altogether... The Soundcraft Ui series was born. The Ui12 and Ui16 offer excellent value for live situations where faders aren't needed and space is at a premium, but the flagship Ui24R is the one to look at if you're looking for a recording mixer-cum-interface. Like most of the other mixers here, it can operate as an audio interface and a direct-to-disk recorder, but the Ui24R is slightly unusual in that it can do both at the same time, offering a convenient redundant setup for when failure is not an option.
Allen & Heath Qu-Pac & Qu-SB
Soundcraft aren't the only proponents of the stagebox-format mixer: Allen & Heath also make some enticing options, including the Qu-Pac and Qu-SB. Both are based on the tech from their larger Qu-series consoles, and they offer a similar amount of analogue I/O, but differ chiefly in terms of the amount of physical control they offer. The Qu-SB can only be controlled remotely, via Ethernet or Wi-Fi, whereas the Qu-Pac sports a touchscreen and encoder, allowing you to access all of the main functions directly. Naturally, both can also function as multichannel audio interfaces over USB.
Mackie DL Series
Despite being nearly a decade old, the Mackie DL1608 remains the mixer of choice for our Executive Editor Paul White, mostly because the remote Master Fader app is so intuitive and quick to use. You can now get various rackmounting DL-series mixers, of which the flagship DL32R, with its 32 analogue inputs and 14 assignable mix outs, would make a formidable studio centrepiece. And if faders are a must-have, Mackie also offer the DC16, a substantial hardware controller with 17 faders and encoders, extra I/O via Dante, and a talkback section.
Many of the features that won live sound engineers over to digital desks also have huge potential in the studio. We check out some of the best options.
When large-format digital consoles from the likes of Sony, Tascam, SSL and AMS Neve first appeared, they were targeted at recording studios as well as broadcast and post-production. They never came to dominate the recording sector in the same way, though, and as the notion of 'analogue warmth' gained traction around the turn of the century, they started to become rather unfashionable.
At about the same time, digital technology began to take over the live-sound market, as live productions became ever more ambitious and required ever higher channel counts. Advanced features like remote control, audio networking, scene saving and recall, personal monitor mixing, huge amounts of DSP, and direct-to-USB recording started trickling down into the lower end of the live-sound market, and it wasn't long before studio shut-ins saw their potential for recording applications. In particular, the fact that so many of them can also work as multichannel audio interfaces means that modern digital mixers can fulfil a number of roles: preamplification, A‑D/D‑A conversion, routing and mixing are built into one box. So, whether you need a fader-packed console for hands-on mixing, you do enough live work to justify owning a digital desk, or you're simply drawn to the idea of having an interface and mixing engine in one unit, let's see what the current crop of digital mixers can offer you.
PreSonus StudioLive
PreSonus' original StudioLive console was specifically designed for both live and recording applications, combining familiar analogue-like 'one channel per fader' operation while offering 32 channels of computer recording over Firewire. The range has grown steadily since the first one appeared in 2003, adopting the USB protocol along the way, and now spans everything from large-format 64-channel consoles to the dinky 1U-rack StudioLive 16R. StudioLive mixers also offer an impressive amount of integration with PreSonus' Studio One DAW. For example, you can use a StudioLive mixer as a Studio One DAW controller, and because both console and DAW use the same Fat Channel signal processing, you can even transfer mixer settings between them.
B2B Trade
Price (FOB) | 2000.0 USD | transportation | Air Transportation,Express,Land Transportation,Negotiation Other,Ocean Shipping |
---|---|---|---|
MOQ | 2 | Leadtime | Negotiable |
Payment Options | MoneyGram,Others,T/T,Western Union | Shipping time | Negotiable |
- President
- YU GU HYEON
- Product Category
- Vehicles
- Year Established
- 2004
- Main Markets
-
China
Hong Kong(China)
North Korea
Thailand
- Main Product