I’m having different audio sources that I want all to be played by the same boxes. I don’t expect anything fancy, only bringing the signals together (hence I hope to get it cheap) while maintaining the quality.

As I read through the internet, when it comes to quality it’s where all the affordable ones seem to stay behind. And I’m afraid of tuning the sound to an ill manipulated signal that is added by the mixer and not the track itself.

I first thought about Behringer MX400.

Any experiences on that field? Am I over-engineer it or is this a valid error source that I would introduce, which wasn’t there before?

Thanks ahead!

  • @lemmefixdat4u
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    521 days ago

    Cheap works for non-professional projects. I’ve used Behringer, Alesis, and other inexpensive mixers for sound systems. The tradeoff is cheap generally means you might be replacing the board in 5-10 years. The Alesis mixer lasted about 6 years before the pots got noisy. My karaoke system is a mid-range 16-channel board, and it’s going on 15 years trouble free.

    If all you need is to set the levels and parameters then leave them alone, cheap will work. If you’re making changes while recording or performing, cheap will eventually fail you.

    • @FrankAIOP
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      112 days ago

      It is exactly what you’ve said, I’m not planning to touch the controls anymore after all is setup, that’s why Im hesitating to go with feature rich and expensive. Hence you didn’t experience any decline in all the years of usage?

      • @lemmefixdat4u
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        111 days ago

        Electronics are pretty reliable. Cheap mechanical parts are not. High end systems are be able to withstand the rigors of setup and takedown, dusty environments, and frequent transportation. If you keep a cheap mixer indoors and cover the controls with a dropcloth to minimize dust, it should last quite a while.