Mackie 1604-VLZ Pro

  • Thread starter Thread starter hand in glove
  • Start date Start date
hand in glove

hand in glove

New member
Hey Guys,

Just firstly like to thank those who helped me choosing the Mackie 1604 VLZ pro over the crappy behringer/yamaha stuff. Its great! I'm loving it!

Anywho, just curious with one thing on the desk, i've noticed on the lower part of the faders, when it comes to tracks 9-16, it has labelled "track 1, through to track 8", whats this mean on the desk?
 
hand in glove said:
Hey Guys,

Just firstly like to thank those who helped me choosing the Mackie 1604 VLZ pro over the crappy behringer/yamaha stuff. Its great! I'm loving it!

Anywho, just curious with one thing on the desk, i've noticed on the lower part of the faders, when it comes to tracks 9-16, it has labelled "track 1, through to track 8", whats this mean on the desk?
That's just a throwback to the days when ADAT, DA88s and other 8-track tape recorders were king. The 1604 was originally designed to fit with 8-track decks like a hand in glove (coinidence?!?! ;) :D)

Anyway the idea was that a common wiring scheme using the 1604 with an 8-track was to run the direct outs available on channels 1-8 out to the deck for tracking purposes, then routing the outputs from the deck back into channels 9-16 of the mixer, using those channels to mix the playback of the tape at will. It really was a very compact and convenient scheme that required no re-wiring.

So those numbers are just a handy reference to indicate that those are your playback channels of tape tracks 1-8 *if that is how you have your setup wired*. If you are using your mixer in a different configuration, you can just ignore those numbers, they are meaningless. They don't actually refer to any internal wiring or routing or other internal functionality. They are just there as a printed guide *IF* you have your mixer wired for 8-track I/O as described above.

G.
 
SouthSIDE Glen said:
Anyway the idea was that a common wiring scheme using the 1604 with an 8-track was to run the direct outs available on channels 1-8 out to the deck for tracking purposes, then routing the outputs from the deck back into channels 9-16 of the mixer, using those channels to mix the playback of the tape at will. It really was a very compact and convenient scheme that required no re-wiring.
That's exactly how I have my Mackie setup to work with my Delta 1010. Direct outs from channels 1-8 go to the Delta inputs, and the outputs go back to channels 9-16.

Allows me to use outboard fx on channels 9-16 without printing them on the recording (which is taken from channels 1-8). Also allows you to raise/lower the listening volume on any item in the mix, without affecting the recording volume.
 
Ah i see, that makes sense. Yeah where i study the mackie 24-8 is set up like that. I also have a delta 1010, so i might give that setup a whirl like dachay2tnr has done.

The 1604 was originally designed to fit with 8-track decks like a hand in glove (coinidence?!?! )

Hahaha, yes very nice coincidence!
 
hand in glove said:
Ah i see, that makes sense. Yeah where i study the mackie 24-8 is set up like that. I also have a delta 1010, so i might give that setup a whirl like dachay2tnr has done.
Just make sure that channels 1-8 on the Mackie are not assigned to the Main Mix. Otherwise you will be getting output from both the direct connections and the returns from the Delta. Only assign channels 9-16.
 
Back
Top