PRO MIXER DX1000
Channel | Input 1 | Input 2 |
3 | PHONO 1 | CD 1 |
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4 | PHONO 2 | CD 2 |
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5 | PHONO 3 | CD 3 |
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6 | LINE 1 | CD 4 |
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7 | LINE 2 | TAPE* |
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Tab. 4.1: Stereo channel configuration
* Channel 7’s TAPE input is
+Never patch line level devices into your highly sensitive phono inputs. Phono cartridge output is measured in millivolts. Line level signals are of the order of magnitude of a volt. With line levels you are looking at a signal up to 100 times more powerful than the phono
+If for some reason your turntable has a
+A mix could include three turntables (channels 3 - 5) and two samplers for creative DJ work, or four CD/cart players plus a stereo tape recorder for a broadcast studio. In fact any line level signal could be patched into any
4.2 Gain setting
+Gain is dependent on EQ. Set up your EQ before
4.2.1 Quick way
Channel input level is continuously monitored by a pair of LEDs . PEAK lets you know if you’re about to overload the channel (it lights at +18 dB). The SIG. LED only responds to bass frequencies and is perfectly suited to keep an eye on the beats. As long as the signal LED is flashing on the beat (and the peak one isn’t) you can be sure the gain is reasonable. Do this for all music channels. Channel gain can be continuously
adjusted by the GAIN knob (from
+If you are in the habit of slamming the channel faders all the way up (+6 dB), try to keep your MAIN faders at a compensatory
4.2.2 Gain setting by using PFL
Hit the PFL button to temporarily send the channel signal to the PFL meter . Adjust GAIN until the PFL meter is hitting the yellow (up to +10 dB) but not the red (clip). Once gain has been set for a channel, release its PFL button.
+Normally you will want to PFL only one channel at a time. This might not be true if you are layering tracks, and/or using “Permanent
4. STEREO INPUT CHANNEL | 11 |