
This mixer is everything that it says it is. I bought mine about 3 weeks ago, and it works great, it’s already done a few gigs, 2 large events, and a rehearsal.
The knobs feel great, very professional.
The board is pretty weighty, can be carried by one person although its recommended to have two persons transport it. It runs cool and has alot of headroom. I used it alongside the MG166CX, and with a QSC Power Amp.
With the MG166CX, the amp was at about 26, with the MG32, had to tone it down to 14, as low as 12 in some instances through the same speaker setup (6 speakers, 2 bass and 4 loudspeakers) and it handled very well.
When time has past, I will hopefully give a more detailed and structured review, but for now, great product. The box it ships with is pretty big, so you may wanna hurry up and get the case for it.
Basically, I’ve been doing some home recording for a while but I’ve just used mix and match software and hardware mostly borrowed from friends. I’d like to have my own recording system that I can use all the time for recording a band with drums, 2 guitars, bass and keys and obviously vocals. I’ve Yamaha Mixer 32 been looking at lots of different setups, the best appearing to be a motu interface with 8 mic pre amps which would set me back about £400. The one good piece of equipment that I have now is a 32 channel Yamaha mixing desk. It’s got 28 mic inserts which is plenty for my recording but there is no onboard interface. Could I achieve a good recording sound if I put all the things I wanted to record into the mixer, got the levels and effects right and then send the L/R mixer outputs into a stereo USB/Firewire audio interface connected to my PC/Mac?Basically, can I achieve a good recording quality this way without having to spend hundreds of pounds.Alex
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Tags: Gigs, Headroom, Instances, Keyword, Knobs, Loudspeakers, Musicalinstruments, Qsc Power Amp, Rehearsal, Ships, Speaker Setup, Speakers, Two Persons, Yamaha Mixer












