B
borjam
New member
I've got a Mackie Onyx 1640 at the club, and recently bought an Allen&Heath WZ3 14:4:2 for my own personal use. I mainly do live jazz recordings and FOH at the club, and later mix ITB (Digital Performer).
Both mixers sound very well, although I didn't buy the Firewire option for the Onyx, recording through MOTU interfaces instead. I think that the eq in the MixWizard is quite better.
When considering a mixer for my personal kit, I thought about the Soundcraft M12, a Mackie Onyx and the A&H. Midas and Crest were out of the question because the cost is much higher
I discarded the M12 quickly once I had a look at the block diagram. The "direct" outs are post-eq. Moreover the Soundcraft doesn't have individual phantom switches. Both the 14:4.2 and the Mackie have eq-bypass switches.
Both have a very good dynamic range, although I've used the A&H much less than the Onyx. The latter has really withstood some funny trumpeteers blowing hard with the mic almost inside the trumpet. Haven't done the test with the A&H yet, but doing some tests I've found the available headroom to be similar.
The A&H is very configurable. The direct outs can be pre-eq, post-eq+pre-fader or post-fader just by moving a pair of jumpers. The subgroups and master faders can be converted to aux masters, so it can be used as a monitor, FOH and recording desk.
The Mackie has pre-everything direct outs, while (curiously) the MixWizard's outs are *always* post-HPF.
And the build quality of the A&H is lightyears ahead of the Onyx. I know I've paid a lot just to have individual circuit boards with all the potentiometers bolted to the strong steel chassis, but I use the Onyx every Thursday and sometimes I feel like I might to break a potentimeter if I'm not careful. Not that I bang them (and I never leave anything on them) but the feeling is important.
Moreover, the Onyx has 60 mm. faders with a horrible feel, and the A&H has 100 mm faders with (imho) a good feeling. Perhaps too smooth, as it seems you can make them slide just by looking at them, but I prefer that anyway
For live work, the Mackie has a cool feature: you have a switch that selects the monitor bus as pre or post fader. I've used it once to carefully balance two singers by sending them to the PFL bus, and making it post-fader instead of pre-fader.
I've got easy access to both desks (1640 and 14:4:2), so, if anyone has any questions I will happily help.
Oh, the 14:4:2 is a bit easier to move around than the 1640.
Both mixers sound very well, although I didn't buy the Firewire option for the Onyx, recording through MOTU interfaces instead. I think that the eq in the MixWizard is quite better.
When considering a mixer for my personal kit, I thought about the Soundcraft M12, a Mackie Onyx and the A&H. Midas and Crest were out of the question because the cost is much higher

I discarded the M12 quickly once I had a look at the block diagram. The "direct" outs are post-eq. Moreover the Soundcraft doesn't have individual phantom switches. Both the 14:4.2 and the Mackie have eq-bypass switches.
Both have a very good dynamic range, although I've used the A&H much less than the Onyx. The latter has really withstood some funny trumpeteers blowing hard with the mic almost inside the trumpet. Haven't done the test with the A&H yet, but doing some tests I've found the available headroom to be similar.
The A&H is very configurable. The direct outs can be pre-eq, post-eq+pre-fader or post-fader just by moving a pair of jumpers. The subgroups and master faders can be converted to aux masters, so it can be used as a monitor, FOH and recording desk.
The Mackie has pre-everything direct outs, while (curiously) the MixWizard's outs are *always* post-HPF.
And the build quality of the A&H is lightyears ahead of the Onyx. I know I've paid a lot just to have individual circuit boards with all the potentiometers bolted to the strong steel chassis, but I use the Onyx every Thursday and sometimes I feel like I might to break a potentimeter if I'm not careful. Not that I bang them (and I never leave anything on them) but the feeling is important.
Moreover, the Onyx has 60 mm. faders with a horrible feel, and the A&H has 100 mm faders with (imho) a good feeling. Perhaps too smooth, as it seems you can make them slide just by looking at them, but I prefer that anyway

For live work, the Mackie has a cool feature: you have a switch that selects the monitor bus as pre or post fader. I've used it once to carefully balance two singers by sending them to the PFL bus, and making it post-fader instead of pre-fader.
I've got easy access to both desks (1640 and 14:4:2), so, if anyone has any questions I will happily help.
Oh, the 14:4:2 is a bit easier to move around than the 1640.