Seeker of Rock said:
The Mackie 24.8 outs are XLR. First time I've sent something out with the new setup into the CDRW-700, and without reading through the manual does anyone know if the 8 bus series has 1/4" outs to that can go into my CDRW700? You know, never an issue with my 488MKII as everything out was RCA, but I never really paid attention to the fact it only takes RCA in and all I see on the Mackie 8 bus is XLR out. I'll read the manual, just looking for a quick answer if anyone is familiar with it to tell me otherwise. I have TS to RCA cables, and I wanted to post a link to a drum test tonight to get some feedback. Unfortunately if XLR to RCA is what I need, that is the one cord and adapter that I don't have. Let me know if anyone knows the 8 bus series and whether I have to wait til tomorrow or whether there is a L/R 1/4" unbalanced out.
You could use the "MIX B" .
Because the main outs are XLR and there are also a duplicate main outs that are 1/4 inch TRS balanced, don't use those unless your mix down unit has balanced inputs.
So the "MIX B" left and right outputs is one way.
The other way is to use your bus to mix down, and set the output switch on the bus outputs to -10, and use a 1/4 to RCA cable.
That's probably the best way anyway cause then you can send the signal back into the mackie from the CDR and monitor the end result on the fly.
In other words:
All your mackie with signals channels coming from the multitrack, push in the "1-2" button only, the L/R MIX putton should be pushed out.
That sends all the signals to bus 1 and 2.
So on the back of the board, bus outputs 1 and 2 send 1/4 to RCA cables to your CDR and set bus output switch to -10 unbalanced.
Then send signal back from CDR to 2 open channel strips on the mackie via RCA to 1/4 inch, connect to the line inputs on top of the board, those are unbalanced. Pan the 2 channels left and right and push in the L/R MIX button only, so that is the signal that you will be monitoring.
Save that main XLR out for some day you buy a mix-down unit that can take that much signal.