
tyler657recpro
Member
On the peavey thing, I've never compared them side by side, but I've found many problems with the peaveys or at least the unity series. Aside from feeling like its going to break under the pressure of you hand touching it, it sounds like crap. Yeah, the pres, eq etc. are very cheaply made, but what I've noticed most about them is the power, or lack thereof. When using all 16 channels, or 12 or whatever it was; it was the largest model, i found that when the (4) singers got to a louder portion of the songs, the board would do some funky things. It would basically lose control, sort of compressing everything down because it would lose power. And the wierd thing was that it would actually raise the level of the monitor output while lowering the mains. Maybe I had a wierd one, but I'd never buy one.
The other problem I've experienced with them is the faders are literally crap, not just the way they sound, but that they actually brake off! Upon further inspection of the broken fader, it's possible to see that there is only a very small piece of plastic holding the fader to the actual power bars. We lossed about six of them, and not due to missuse. I would not deem this a road worthy board at all.
Servicing it was a pain in the ass too, as all the components are on a single horozontally positioned circuit board requiring every knob, fader, and jack to be removed from the front panel. This also explains for the mixer's lack of a solid feeling, as this board is held in by little plastic brads, which are spaced out way too far in addition to being, well, plastic.
Maybe I've just had a bad experience with this mixer, as I've only used one, and never hope to use another, but I really doubt it.
-Tyler
The other problem I've experienced with them is the faders are literally crap, not just the way they sound, but that they actually brake off! Upon further inspection of the broken fader, it's possible to see that there is only a very small piece of plastic holding the fader to the actual power bars. We lossed about six of them, and not due to missuse. I would not deem this a road worthy board at all.
Servicing it was a pain in the ass too, as all the components are on a single horozontally positioned circuit board requiring every knob, fader, and jack to be removed from the front panel. This also explains for the mixer's lack of a solid feeling, as this board is held in by little plastic brads, which are spaced out way too far in addition to being, well, plastic.
Maybe I've just had a bad experience with this mixer, as I've only used one, and never hope to use another, but I really doubt it.
-Tyler