E
Ed Dixon
New member
I don't think there is any question that Mackie and other higher end mixers are probably better than Behringer units. One can always take 2 mixers, regardless of make and model, and measure differences.
The question for most is whether the difference plays a factor in their application. If they can't hear the difference, and others can't hear the difference (amps, speakers, mics, hall acoustics, etc, always enter the picture), then the advantage is mostly lost. However at double or triple the cost, lost $ can always be felt.
For many live applications, this is more likely to be the case. There are some many other factors that swamp differences in mixers. For pure recording setups, the metrics for choice are somewhat different.
I have no experience with budget Yamaha mixers. We have one at church, but I have not worked with it at all. I have bought about 5 different Behringer units, and have great success with each, so I tend to stick with a working model.
Being a Christian is something I see as an advantage here. I spend most of my playing time at church, so I can relate to that on the same scale.
Ed
The question for most is whether the difference plays a factor in their application. If they can't hear the difference, and others can't hear the difference (amps, speakers, mics, hall acoustics, etc, always enter the picture), then the advantage is mostly lost. However at double or triple the cost, lost $ can always be felt.
For many live applications, this is more likely to be the case. There are some many other factors that swamp differences in mixers. For pure recording setups, the metrics for choice are somewhat different.
I have no experience with budget Yamaha mixers. We have one at church, but I have not worked with it at all. I have bought about 5 different Behringer units, and have great success with each, so I tend to stick with a working model.
Being a Christian is something I see as an advantage here. I spend most of my playing time at church, so I can relate to that on the same scale.
Ed
, I chatted with the FOH'ist to find out why there were so many sound probs and if maybe he was a newbie. Found out he was well-known and successfull FOH'ist and engineer Scott H....(I'm a lil nice and rite now can't remember his last name). He told me that he uses an SSL (I think SerJ
)but was unable to use it and was forced to borrow the MX9000 from some mid-level NYC studio. I think I kinda' pissed him off when I kept inquiring why a person of his experience wasn't able to utilize the board's perf on the run regardless of it's quality. But instead of blowing me off he simply stated "Beh boards, 'specially the MX9000, are not geared for fine tuning nor for avg set levels. Due to the the board's lack of quality or the basics of even normal operation, it forces you to become a tweak-freak in order to maintain constant gain levelling and freq'y control on each performance as well as adj'ing particular passages in a song".
