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I'm looking into replacing my current DDA-console in my production studio. I need something compact since space is an issue but I don't want to compromise in sound, at all. I also do more and more final mixes in my studio (although it's mainly for production) so I'd like to bring up the quality as high as possible. I need 16 channels minimum, preferrably 24 and some extra ins for fx-ret's etc... a 16ch inline design would do fine aswell. Good eq is a must ! I have 1073 pres, Apogee converters, nice vintage tube mics and nice outboard so the console is really my weakest link. What do you think I could (realistically ! ) find out there since big consoles in small frames seem to be very rare and getting overpriced. I like the sound of discrete designs but it's not a must. I've been looking at qutie a few different options but THE console I haven't seen yet... Yes, I want a huge Neve in pocket size... Any tips ?

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KurtFoster Mon, 05/03/2004 - 21:10

Big sound comes from big consoles. When a console is sized down, compromises have to be made. Sound quality suffers. I have not yet heard a small console that sounds as good as a good old fashoned Neve, Trident, MCI etc.

I had to cross this threshold myself and I came to the conclusion that when faced with the choice of a large, expensive, maintenance hungry, great sounding large format desk VS. a small, affordable, no maintenance, thin anemic sounding board the best solution was no console at all ... so now I mix "in the box".

It has taken me a while to get to the point where I feel things are sounding as good as they did when I had a 2" tape machine and a large format console. I had to learn to do a few things differently and make some different mic choices, all while I learned the ins and outs of how different mic pres affect a mix. In the end, things are coming along and I am getting pretty happy with the sound of mixing in DAW - land.

anonymous Tue, 05/04/2004 - 05:28

Kurt, in what box do you mix? I recently saw a thread that said that ITB summing across different DAW software sounded different. Specifically, that MOTU (which I use) does particularly "bad" summing. Perhaps it's time to differentiate digial summing algorithms, the same way we talk about different mic pres, compressors, etc. Just because it's digital doesn't make everything equal.

KurtFoster Tue, 05/04/2004 - 22:44

Clueless wrote: Kurt, in what box do you mix? I recently saw a thread that said that ITB summing across different DAW software sounded different. Specifically, that MOTU (which I use) does particularly "bad" summing. Perhaps it's time to differentiate digial summing algorithms, the same way we talk about different mic pres, compressors, etc. Just because it's digital doesn't make everything equal.

Clueless,
I am using Cubase 5.1 , an older program, at 24 bits .. with a dual 1800 Anthlon and 1 gig of ram ... I don't hear any summing problems. I love my system and all the power that it has.. It does anything I throw at it..

anonymous Fri, 05/14/2004 - 15:01

There are a few high-quality compact mixers on the market that may offer the character you're after...Aurora has one that's similar to the Neve designs (done by a former Neve engineer) and API has one that sounds like, well, an API...they're typically modular (in eight-channel increments) and rackmountable and are built with good power supplies and components and all that stuff. (There are others as well, those are just the first two that come to mind.) But they tend to be fairly minimal in terms of features...usually no EQ, maybe an aux send or two...but if you're looking for the "sound" of one of the big consoles that may be an option, combined with some nice outboard EQ's and compressors.

-Duardo