To keep the integrity of your stereo information you will have to also pan each channel from each keyboard. That is, keys main channel 1 hard left, channel 2 hard right.
The keyboard outputs should be panned left and right, as in the left main keyboard's output should be panned left and the right main keyboard output should be panned right, same thing with the aux keyboard. Thank for the insight @mr instructor
Thank you for this. With this arrangement, can one still plug a guitar and use the auxiliary output of this analogue mixer to send to the digital mixer too?
What can I do if I need more auxiliary for my monitors? I was thinking to get another mixer to put all my inputs in so I could have utilise the aux before sending it to the main mixer for house.
But you wouldn't be able to mix and process the keyboards individually. By so-doing you'd have summed up the left signal of the main keyboard with the left signal of the auxillary keyboard, and also summed up the right signals of both keyboards together. How then would you process them individually?
@@meshbeemusic Well, I use this setup. Unlike what Mr Instructor was saying, I’m able to use the submix mixer to mix the instruments individually. It is on the main mixer I keep unity settings or sometimes less than unity. The key is that there should be no output if gain is turned down all the way.
This is probably good for 2 keys max. 3 keyboards with immature keyboardists, and then you start to have gain staging problems on the main mixer. You gonna be adjusting gain level all day 😂😂
@@dotunadesina ok I understand.. but I think the line input is for any line instruments like piano, guitar and others.. so I guess it may work.. in a situation where theres no di box and you need to send your bass to subs speakers