after running a couple mixes through my SSL Six super analog console I'm so impressed on the master's I've created which now leaves me to always depend on a console for mixing and mastering....the headroom is incredible and like you guys already mentioned hard to explain these videos are awesome cheers 👍🍺
Hi, thanks so much for these two videos, I have watched a few about patchbays and these are the only ones that make sense and easy to understand. However I do have one “question” in the first video you have a small Scarlett but in the second video you have a Clarett and the wiring looks different but I couldn’t see how you had it, I have a 18i20 and I want to be able to use all 8 channels I also have two monitors and a sub plugged in, how different is the wiring to the patch bay from the small Scarlett in the first video if any? Hope this is not a dumb question, thanks.
If you want to label those. Buy some sticker sheets and download patch cad. I had the same Patchbays and it worked great. Thanks for the video. You will need a paper cutter.
This might be a stupid question and I can't really see it close up in the video, but are all the patch bays and switches all set to 'Thru', especially the one with used for the interface ?
My question is to hook patchbay to the mixing console using 24 channel mixer but only using 16 channles for recording not using any daw everything out of the box hardware do you have any videos on that I'm not seeing any but I may have overlooked it
Sorry but these were pretty confusing and useless for me. Why would I want the outputs of my interface going into the patch bay? My outputs are going to my monitors. I can understand plugging a mic into the pre amp then into a compressor the into the interface or a synthesizer into an effects unit then into the interface.
You only need a patchbay if you are using external hardware like a compressor, EQ etc.. If you are not using any outboard hardware then you dont need a patchbay
I am running outboard hardware. a RNC compressor, an Art pre amp, an Alesis Midiverb 2, a Zoom multi-effects processor, a stereo chorus and a distortion unit