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This was a little annoying when someone accidentally stretches the cable plugged in, if not taken to account, it will easily slide over. The first downside i found was that is does not have rubber fits on the bottom for grip on your table top. The mic channels also have a compressor, not great but definitely useful when jamming with multiple instruments. It does offer USB connectivity if you would like to use it as a sound card itself. It's compact size is awesome for fitting it in your backpack and going for jam sessions, the size does come at a cost though, instead of faders for the channels you have level knobs which is okay but a little less accurate that faders. It does offer 48v phantom power, which is rare in the price category. The mic preamps seem fine for what you pay for, i still would rather use my sound card when recording. why not move on to 3.I'v had this mixer a few days in already, i have it connected to my sound card via stereo (irrelevant: my sound card is also Behringer, the 204HD model).įirst thing i want to highlight is don't expect to compare this to mixers in the 400-500? range, it's a cheap product for beginners/intermediate users. If it has a video output too, either or both audio would fail and only the video would work. If the left input works, the right one would fail. One thing I don't like about everything that uses the RCA connection is the existence is the RCA. Because its casing is metal, it feels more reliable.
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I like Behringer 302 too, but it's in a plastic casing and it only has 1 XLR input, and of course I could buy this and that cable to make it work, but Micromix has 2 XLR inputs and it had a metal casing!! I decided to try out. I actually wanted a mixer that can handle at least 3 channels of input, but it seems like 2 channels are the maximum by an USB powered mixer. I am strengthening my street performance gears(or just buying more toys), and i wanted a USB powered mixer. My mackie 402 vlz4 mixer is gonna have a rest while I keep using this micromix 1 usb its size is superb, its ability is beyond my expectations, the usb power supply fits right in with my sound system. This little mixer excells by its pressence. Thomann make some quality equip for sensible money. Again, I have to mention chanel 2 with that super electric guitar button, works a treat, as an electric guitar preamp costs big bucks.Īll told, I am truly surprised at the "ability" of this little mixer for little money. Of course I have much bigger named mixers of similar capabilities, but this little mixer certainly, easily holds its ground against the bigger names at twice, or 3 times the price. I wont use this for recording as I only do "bar gigs". The USB power supply works so well with my Box MBA1 usb output socket, making me completely mobile, battery powered for 4 hours (plenty for my repertoire). This little mixer has superb pre amps and the guitar switch, an amaing addition and completely capable of flattering even high output pickups. The kind of gear you can just stash in the bag with no protection and expect to work for a couple of years. Unit build is metal, solid, knobs are well tightened. Maybe a FetHead can help you regarding this point, but if you're looking for a quality signal you're probably better off looking at other more expensive (but still small) interfaces. I should add that the preamps are very noisy, but that was to be expected considering the price. I thought this was a fault on my units but Thomann customer service confirmed this was working as intended. This makes the 3,5mm mic jack only usable with active or pre-amplified microphones, and it kind of defeats the point of having this unit to be honest. This is however not possible on either the MicroMix 1 or 2 as the circuit board does not feed phantom power to this port (well, on the MicroMix 1 it does but only for a few seconds after pressing "phantom"). One major selling point for the 302USB was the fact you could plug a average consumer-grade headset (like your standard gaming gear) into it and use the 3,5mm microphone in. This is obviously targeted at the same audience and I suspect there was a certain amount of plagiarism when it comes to design and possibly routing schematics. I ordered both the MicroMix 1 and MicroMix 2 as replacements for the legendary Behringer Xenyx 302 USB which I used to love mostly for its size and routing options, but has been discontinued.