Thank you, Jordan! There some specs about the Yamaha I didn’t know, like the exact amount of DB [64] output gain and the fact that the compressor knob boosts the gain. Very useful info. Great review as always ✨
Useful, helpful, precise, not boring, great voice tone & speech speed, packed of accurate comparison info follow by clear summery….one of the best comparison video on youTube. Tvm~~~
Love what the mackie is offering but what stops me from buying it is the USB input 3/4 being on a dedicated channel strip and USB 1/2 being on a blend Knob. No one really or ever uses USB 3/4, Everyone wants USB 1/2 on a Dedicated Channel Strip not USB 3/4
I had bought a Mackie ProFXv3 after watching your comparison video with the Yamaha MG10XU. However, it seems like the Mackie mixers in India are defective. There is a loud buzz that eminates from the mixer even when no mic or instrument is connected. It gets increasingly loud when the volume knob or gain is turned up. I thought it was only a problem with the mixer that I bought, however I tested a couple more Mackies at a store and they all had the same issue. A sound-engineer friend also told me that the same problem exists with all the new Mackie mixers. I exchanged the Mackie for the Yamaha MG10XU and so far it has served me very well. Have you come across this issue anywhere else with Mackie? Or is it possible that they ship all the defective pieces to India?
Hard choice to make cos both have something that the oder doesn't. Great comparison again very helpful. It's a good idea utilize something like the Behringer Micromon MA400 to record loops? Thanks
great! from yamaha they only have 16 chsnnel with four aux, i hace 10 xu but you can't have monitir with effect , i hace 12 xu you can have one aux , there is no possibilties to have more aux without buying 16 xu. any advice?, i also have digital mixer
Sir is Yamaha mg10xu has a volume control for the left and right speakers? If not, is there a Yamaha mixer having left n right volume control? Is it useless adding a two channel equalizer if Yamaha mixer doesn't separate left n right volume?
I have an old Mackie mixer with a 6 ch graphic eq on the output. I'm not any expert on how this works, but I was told it can be used to dial out feedback. But then on another video, you show how to reduce feedback using channel strip EQ. Which is best practice?
For live situations use the graphic eq (ease of use and fast access) for recording situations use the channel eq. The channel eq will dial out the feedback in a precise manner without affecting other channels in that frequency range being adjusted where as with the graphic eq your affecting the entire output of the mix in the specified eq band.