A
Asswipe
Banned
I have a jerk friend who rubs his dangerous 2 bus says it makes his music better I cant hear the difference.
I cant hear the difference.
They are also REALLY useful if you want to use out board effects without worrying about latency that you have to deal with if you just use outboard as an inset effect on a track by routing individual tracks out to hardware and back to the DAW
I use mine in combination with 2 outboard channel EQs, 2 channel compressors and a master bus compressor and don't have to deal with trying to get the outboard fx to line up with the in the box sounds as I just put them in line before the summing mixer or after the summing mixer before returning to the DAW in the case of the Master bus compressor, and mix through them
saves a ton of latency and monitoring headaches
They are also REALLY useful if you want to use out board effects without worrying about latency that you have to deal with if you just use outboard as an inset effect on a track by routing individual tracks out to hardware and back to the DAW
I use mine in combination with 2 outboard channel EQs, 2 channel compressors and a master bus compressor and don't have to deal with trying to get the outboard fx to line up with the in the box sounds as I just put them in line before the summing mixer or after the summing mixer before returning to the DAW in the case of the Master bus compressor, and mix through them
saves a ton of latency and monitoring headaches
Question. If your DAW is outputing sixteen tracks to the summing mixer (and that's every out you've got), what would the summing mixer writing to?
You wouldn't believe it if I told you....
Oh for Heaven's sake of course I would. Two track reel-to-reel, iPod, what?
Sorry. The answer seems so goofy that I couldn't even bring myself to post. I know a couple people with obsessions with this stuff. 16 channels out, analog summing mixer, right back into the daw computer.
Well the RME Micstasy supposedly can do simultaneous in and out so maybe...
Question. If your DAW is outputing sixteen tracks to the summing mixer (and that's every out you've got), what would the summing mixer writing to?
You can take the two track output of the summing mixer to what ever you want.
Many people (me included) record back to a new stereo track in the DAW so you will need a way to monitor the return so you can mix effectively but you could record back to any kind of device, 2 track tape, a CD writer, Another computer or whatever
Question. If your DAW is outputing sixteen tracks to the summing mixer (and that's every out you've got), what would the summing mixer writing to?
...Summing mixers have risen to prominence of late as many engineers hate the way a DAW mix bus sounds.
Agreed...
Some folks say there is no difference between a DAW in-the-box (itb) mix and a clean analog mix. I disagree with that due to my own experimentation. My (itb) DAW mix sounds worse than the multitrack playback itself. In other words, when I bounce (mix) all tracks to a new stereo track, the new track suddenly sounds degraded and rougher. I can actually hear a difference from a few minutes prior when I was working with separate tracks. However, if I use my analog summing amp to do the mix, it stays mainly unchanged, (with the exception of slight analog coloration which I like.)