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Junior Varsity
16 Channel Rackmount Mixer (MixWiz vs Soundcraft GB2R), Cheap DSP
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<blockquote data-quote="Alex Connell" data-source="post: 57764" data-attributes="member: 1630"><p>Re: 16 Channel Rackmount Mixer (MixWiz vs Soundcraft GB2R), Cheap DSP</p><p></p><p>From a DSP standpoint I am really only familiar with the items that I personally own. However, for the past five years I have been using a Peavey VSX26 for DSP and I have been pleased with it. It offers all of the basic features that you might need and you can use the mic input on the front panel as an additional input in order to be able to have stereo tops and mono aux subs. It has also been rock solid living in a rack in a trailer seeing periods of heavy use and long periods of inactivity. I cannot comment on whether it more or less user friendly than the other potential options but it has always been fairly intuitive in my mind. </p><p></p><p>+1 to Rainer on the usefulness of the additional mono/aux sub output and fader available on the MixWiz3.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Alex Connell, post: 57764, member: 1630"] Re: 16 Channel Rackmount Mixer (MixWiz vs Soundcraft GB2R), Cheap DSP From a DSP standpoint I am really only familiar with the items that I personally own. However, for the past five years I have been using a Peavey VSX26 for DSP and I have been pleased with it. It offers all of the basic features that you might need and you can use the mic input on the front panel as an additional input in order to be able to have stereo tops and mono aux subs. It has also been rock solid living in a rack in a trailer seeing periods of heavy use and long periods of inactivity. I cannot comment on whether it more or less user friendly than the other potential options but it has always been fairly intuitive in my mind. +1 to Rainer on the usefulness of the additional mono/aux sub output and fader available on the MixWiz3. [/QUOTE]
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16 Channel Rackmount Mixer (MixWiz vs Soundcraft GB2R), Cheap DSP
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