
Bryan316
New member
Okay. Four singers in the band, lots of harmonies, lots of detail in the songs. Sick of bad monitors. Sick of bad stage acoustics. We want to up our game, and sing as professionally as the rest of our performance. So we're starting the process of building a rack with everything jammed into it.
We want to start with one transmitter, and three receivers. Our keyboardist doesn't need to go wireless, we can feed him a cable to his stands. So we'll be happy enough to start with just vocals in the in-ears, and just a stereo mix of everything together, just like our PA speakers in the practice room. Eventually, we'll add two more transmitters so each of us gets our own channel, with individualized mixes. Then we can add our own instruments and let everyone blend what they need for their own tastes.
To start, we wanted to use a single 4-channel mixer, and just feed it to one transmitter. I personally want to plan ahead, and invest. Why buy something, and then have to replace it a year later? So I want to find a rack mounted mini mixer that can take four vocals, two guitars and bass, three keyboards and an ambient stage mic. So a 12 channel mixer would be perfect. I found the Alesis MultiMix 12R, which should do very nicely, or the Behriner EuroRack Pro RX1202FX. Compact, enough inputs. Problem is, not enough Aux Outs to get us 4 separate feeds, unless I can finagle two transmitter channels as Main Outs, and the other two transmitter channels as the Aux Outs. So I may end up using my Alesis Studio32 and top-rack it, which gives me plenty of Aux Outs and still keep our Mains available.
Here's the primary question.
If we get to a venue and roll this box in, and tell the sound man we're going to run the mics into our box to give ourselves our in-ears, what's the most practical and time-crucial way to split the signal and give him his individual channels? My board has channel inserts, I think I can use that? Would maybe need 1/4" TRS to XLR balanced outs, to plug his mic cables into?
Anyone seen or tried or currently use any tricks like this?
We want to start with one transmitter, and three receivers. Our keyboardist doesn't need to go wireless, we can feed him a cable to his stands. So we'll be happy enough to start with just vocals in the in-ears, and just a stereo mix of everything together, just like our PA speakers in the practice room. Eventually, we'll add two more transmitters so each of us gets our own channel, with individualized mixes. Then we can add our own instruments and let everyone blend what they need for their own tastes.
To start, we wanted to use a single 4-channel mixer, and just feed it to one transmitter. I personally want to plan ahead, and invest. Why buy something, and then have to replace it a year later? So I want to find a rack mounted mini mixer that can take four vocals, two guitars and bass, three keyboards and an ambient stage mic. So a 12 channel mixer would be perfect. I found the Alesis MultiMix 12R, which should do very nicely, or the Behriner EuroRack Pro RX1202FX. Compact, enough inputs. Problem is, not enough Aux Outs to get us 4 separate feeds, unless I can finagle two transmitter channels as Main Outs, and the other two transmitter channels as the Aux Outs. So I may end up using my Alesis Studio32 and top-rack it, which gives me plenty of Aux Outs and still keep our Mains available.
Here's the primary question.
If we get to a venue and roll this box in, and tell the sound man we're going to run the mics into our box to give ourselves our in-ears, what's the most practical and time-crucial way to split the signal and give him his individual channels? My board has channel inserts, I think I can use that? Would maybe need 1/4" TRS to XLR balanced outs, to plug his mic cables into?
Anyone seen or tried or currently use any tricks like this?