How does a mixer work?

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vermades

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I see all these knobs on a mixer and i'm curious what exactly they all do. So you can adjust the volume, pan...for each channel..what else?, does it act as an equalizer as well? So if each channel say has 10 knobs..what are their purpose? enlighten me as I've never seen one other than in pictures and am a hardware noob.

I'm glad there is a noob forum so I don't feel like such a noob.
 
Well, I am not the best resource.

Imagine a guy with eight girlfriends, all of them in the same singing group. In the normal course of things each girl would be just as loud as her neighbor, but Mr. Lucky on the board can boost the signal of his current favorite so that it stands out above the others. You wouldn't want the Bass so loud the vocals could not be heard, so you can mute one and boost the other, etc..

The rest of the knobs let you tweak the signal. I don't know if they do all that much, or perhaps my ears just suck (not literally). On the Mackie at church there's a woman on the worship team who wanted the midrange boosted. We made some motions on the board (without changing a thing) and asked her if that was better. She said it was. Heh.
 
vermades said:
I see all these knobs on a mixer and i'm curious what exactly they all do. So you can adjust the volume, pan...for each channel..what else?, does it act as an equalizer as well? So if each channel say has 10 knobs..what are their purpose? enlighten me as I've never seen one other than in pictures and am a hardware noob.

I'm glad there is a noob forum so I don't feel like such a noob.

The basic function of a mixer is to take a large number of physical inputs, and create a smaller number of mixes, also called busses. These busses can then be routed to various physical outputs. Some mixers have a lot of flexibility in how the signals are routed, some mixers the routing is fixed.

On a typical inexpensive mixer, you might have the following busses:

- Master bus, variously called main mix, stereo bus, L-R, etc. Technically that is two busses, left and right. It is fed by the pan knob on each input channel, post-channel fader (meaning that the level of each input channel fed to the master bus is controlled by that channel's fader). The overall level of the master bus is usually controlled by a master fader, or a pair (L-R) of faders. The master bus feeds the main L-R output. Some mixers also have a seperate mono output which is the sum of the L-R busses.

- One or two Monitor mixes. These are fed by a monitor knob on each channel strip, which is typically pre-fader (meaning that the level of each input channel fed to the monitor mix is NOT controlled by that channel's fader, just the monitor knob). Each monitor mix will have either a master level knob or fader.

- One or more effects sends. These are fed by an effects knob, similar to a monitor send, but is normally post-fader. The effects send usually has a master level knob, and there will often be dedicated input channels for a stereo effects return. This bus is used to send whatever inputs you select to an outboard effects device, like delay, reverb, etc.

- Some mixers don't have dedicated monitor and effects busses, instead, they simply label them as auxiliary (aux) sends. In this case, each aux send or group of aux sends (1-2, 3-4, etc.) may be switchable as to whether it is pre- or post- fader.

OK, that's the basic mixing function. Mixers are set up with input channels on the left, and bus controls on the right.

Beyond that, mixers can also have:

- Microphone preamps on some, most, or all of their input channels.

- EQ controls on input channels. Some or all of these might be parametric, which means that the frequency center and/or width of the EQ is controllable.

- Onboard effects

- Built-in power amp (called a powered mixer)

- Headphone amp

- Graphic EQ on the master bus.

- Tape in/out controls (usually assignable to various busses, and fed by master bus)

- Analog/Digital conversion, or even Digital/Analog, usually on a digital mixer.

- Automation

- and much, much, more!! OK, maybe only a little more.


To get back to your original question, the layout of an input channel strip is typically:

- Mic/line input jacks

- Channel insert--allows you to send the input channel signal out after the preamp but before some or all of the other channel controls. The signal will be returned on the same jack (tip-ring-sleeve) back into the channel.

- Mic preamp control (level, trim, or gain). This may include switches for a pad (dB reduction) or polarity reversal (sometimes called phase).

- EQ

- Aux sends, with various assign switches.

- Pan control

- mute and solo switches. Mute is for killing the channel without having to move the fader. Solo kills all non-soloed channels.

- channel fader

- If you're lucky, you get a few LEDs on each channel as a level meter. If you're really lucky (and rich), you get a meter bridge with analog VU meters, although that would be at the top of the mixer.

The output section is just a bunch of faders and knobs to control levels, with some type of VU meter(s) and maybe a switch or two for assigns, the tape input, the onboard effects controls, the headphone amp . . .
 
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wheelema said:
We made some motions on the board (without changing a thing) and asked her if that was better. She said it was. Heh.

The old "EQ placebo"!

I use it on my wife's car all the time! :D
 
getuhgrip said:
The old "EQ placebo"!

I use it on my wife's car all the time! :D

There is a sheet taped to the door of the audio closet in my church with the 'proper' mixer settings. Depending on the channel, the monitor and effects knobs are set between 3 and 5.

There is nothing hooked up to the monitor or effects sends . . .
 
hi,
yeah, this is responding partially to mshilarious' post. i'm sure that all of that's simplified as it is, but i still don't understand it. i've been reading a lot of the easier to understand sites but i still am just understanding little fragments. so if someone doesn't mind, would you please define the following terms in LITERAL words that anyone who knows NOTHING about any of this, like myself, can understand? and i'm not talking slightly more understandable, i mean with so much simplicity that you think you're explaining it to a puppy.

pan knob
busses
routing
input channel
physical outputs
fader
Monitor mixes
EQ
frequency center
Analog/Digital conversion, or even Digital/Analog, usually on a digital mixer.
Automation
scene
Synchronization
DigitalI/O
playback
+16 dBu
AUX IN/OUT
SCSI port
S/P DIF digital interface
44.1 kHz
phrase
chains
internal effect send

i realize this is a lot of stuff but anyone who takes the time to explain it, like i said, in the simplest terms, like what each thing does literally, your time will be appreciated VERY much.

mike
 
pan knob - defines which way (left or right) a signal goes
busses - where signals are summed (added together)
routing - no tricks here, its just where you send something
input channel - a channel on your mixer where you plug something in
physical outputs - outputs with actual means to send somewhere... via 1/4 inch jack, xlr
fader - allows for change in volume. these are either rotary knobs or vertical
Monitor mixes - a mix different other than the main, as described above. these are for tweaking how much of certain sources go to your studio musicians.
EQ - gain adjustment of specific frequencies.
frequency center - usually refers to paramentric eq... where the peak of an eq curve is.
Analog/Digital conversion, or even Digital/Analog - any time a signal is converted from analog to digital or from digital to analog
Automation - allows you to preset mixing movements (level, eq) on a mixer or software.
scene - usually refers to automation... the settings of the mixer as a whole
Synchronization - locking together of two devices so they can work together without errors.
DigitalI/O - digital inputs and outputs: S/PDIF, TosLink, ect.
playback - the playing back of recorded material
+16 dBu - refering to microphone inputs where the signal is boosted 16 decibels.
AUX IN/OUT - deffined very well by mshilarious
SCSI port - connection on a computer for a SCSI hard drive
S/P DIF digital interface - Sony/Philips digital interface... transmits digital stereo signals by rca connector
44.1 kHz - a samplerate... refers to number of times a sample is taken of a signal per second
phrase - not sure about this, maybe has to do with loops? im not heavy into that sort of thing.
chains - the chain of devices in your studio.
internal effect send - an effect send is what it sounds like... its an output for sending a signal to an effects device. i'm guessing this is refering to an internal effects processor.

someone correct me if im wrong somewhere in here.
 
heroics321 said:
actually, i'm not too sure about that +16dbu question.

Your definitions were otherwise excellent . . .

I don't think we can define this too well without knowing the context. Decibels (dB) can be a difficult topic, but basically it's a relative measure of signal strength. the 'u' in dBu indicates what you are referencing.

OK, I realize that made no sense. +16dBu sounds like some sort of headroom spec, albeit a low one. Headroom is the strongest (loudest) signal a device can generate/process/handle without clipping, which usually makes a nasty distortion sound.

Perhaps at this point if you asked us a process question, like "how to I do this with a mixer', we can be of more help. What exactly do you want your mixer to do? Do you need a mixer? Are you wondering whether or not you need a mixer? Those sorts of questions.
 
heroics321 said:
after looking at his other thread, i'm assuming his questions were referring to his recorder (a Korg D8 http://www.korg.com/gear/info.asp?A_PROD_NO=D8).

Yeah, that's an input headroom spec then. Anything over +16dBu will clip the input or the internal A/D converter.

Anything that hot is already going to have been through a preamp. If you are feeding this recorder with another preamp, you need to be sure that preamp doesn't send a signal hotter than +16dBu. Whether or not you can easily tell that depends on the type of VU meter you have on that piece of gear.
 
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