![]() ![]() I will guarantee this mixer to work as it 100% should. Includes the original manual and wall supply. Simultaneously connect up to a wide range of microphones, line level devices, synths, and more. It has spent its entire life in the case or set up in the home. ![]() more There are no marks or scratches on this at all. Yamaha MG166CX 16 Chanel Mixing Board In Gator Case Here is an excellent condition Yamaha 16 Channel Mixer. All equipment is tested and guaranteed excellent condition unless otherwise noted. I decided to do that so I could get the vintage equipment I wanted, and offering the rest here at very fair Buy It Nows. I am a collector of certain items that this musician had that I really wanted. I always will combine shipping to save you money. I am offering them at very fair Buy it Now prices, Check out my other items. This gear was never gigged with, and only used in the home. Many of them still in their original boxes. But that means USB and the PC is involved, so you lose some real-time processing.I reciently purchased a very large amount of home studio gear directly from a lifelong musician who had to give up playing guitar due to his health. Where you can actually get away with it though with the StudioLive is to be able to multitrack into your DAW and then in software route to buses, run through software compressors or effects and send back to several different mix channels (1, 2, 3 or 4) and into the mix. So, while the multitrack is by far its biggest strength, being able to route to multiple processors is really limited in my opinion. Optionally, if FX aren't that important, the FX bus can be used as a mix monitor as well. If you do that, you're cutting down on monitors. ![]() The two Aux groups on the StudioLive are probably used for stage monitors, and the only way I can see to include them in the mix if you were to route line effects would be to bring them back to a stereo bus. The only options to route to external processors are to send channel 1, 2 or the FX channel to a processor. The StudioLive on the other hand gives a lot of PC/Mac routing options over USB, so the PC can be used to run plugins to process inputs and put back into the master mix, but you need a PC on stage for that. The drawbacks are the stereo out over USB and no multitrack. The Yamaha also gives you on-board compression. The Yamaha for instance has 4 Aux send and 4 Group out, which allows auxiliary routing into outboard processors like reverb and compression. This is incredible for recording and mixing live, but there are drawbacks which I now find myself trying to work around. I've got the new Presonus StudioLive AR16, which is a mixer that allows each channel to be multitracked out over USB separately, and allows for 4 USB return channels. ![]()
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