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Old 03-08-2008, 07:35 PM
brandondrury's Avatar
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Default M-Audio ProjectMix Reviews





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Is The M-Audio ProjectMix The Right Audio Interface For You?
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M-Audio ProjectMix Description
ProjectMix I/O is a control surface combined with a FireWire 18 x 14 audio interface that turns your computer into a complete digital production station. Features include 9 touch-sensitive motorized moving faders and 8 assignable endless rotary encoder knobs for channel or plug-in functions. I/Os include: 8 switchable phantom-powered analog mic/line inputs (XLR and 1/4" TRS balanced) with switchable phantom power and signal/peak LEDs; 8 x 8 ADAT Lightpipe; MIDI with activity LEDs; 2 x 2 S/PDIF coaxial optical/digital; 4 analog outputs (1/4" TRS balanced); 2 stereo headphone outputs (1/4" TRS) with independent level controls; and one front-panel instrument input (1/4" TS) switchable for input one.
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Old 03-12-2009, 05:50 AM
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Default Re: M-Audio ProjectMix Reviews

I wish I had a review of this when I was purchasing my Projectmix - I couldn't seem to find much of anything anywhere on the web... So for people like me... this is for you - I hope it helps.

Firstly the things I like: It has 8 mic preamps with XLR connectors, so while I am certainly no golden-eared expert, they sound pretty good to me - whatever you feed into it, that's pretty much what comes out. It also has 8 line-level phono connectors as well as a Hi-Z connector for DI-ing guitars & bass.

It's also a control surface for you DAW (I use Sonar) - this is pretty cool - motorized faders etc, just like a "mini-SSL" or the like. It has some standard control setups for all the major DAW's, but you can pretty much customize it to suit yourself (control you plugins with real nobs & so forth).

It has an extra 8 channels of audio in if you have another preamp that can feed it an Adat digital lightpipe, bringing another 8 audio channels in. This is great if you want to comprehensively mic drums with room-mics etc. or if you want to record a live band.

It has word clocking connectivity so you can sinc. it with other digital devices with no problems.

It looks pretty cool...

Now the things I don't like that I wish I new before I bought it:
There are no pad switches on the preamps. Ironically, even though you would think this thing is your one-stop drum-recording solution (I did) this makes it virtually impossible to record drums, since even with the preamps turned down to zero, they clip! This I found hard to believe when I discovered it. The only solution was to spend more money & buy some pad-switching inserts. Do you get the impression I was unhappy about this? That is an understatement... This was VERY frustating to find a work-around, but nonetheless, it works very well with the pad-inserts for drums... So be warned!

It has no channel inserts for sending the analogue signal to a mixer etc. for true zero latency mixing... Again, a strange ommission considering drum recording would, at first appearances suit this interface down to the ground.

It only has four analogue out channels for getting your audio out of the computer.

It has very rudimentary metering - basically just a green "signal" led & a red "clip" led on each channel.

There is no on-board DSP to provide some ear candy for the "talent".

Overall, I'd give the Projectmix about 7 out of 10... I've solved all the things that I didn't like about it / wasn't aware that it didn't do, but doing so was quite expensive & time-consuming... It's a reliable unit, & I'm happy to continue working with it.

As I said, I hope this is helpful to all prospective buyers... Have fun!

Last edited by fHumble fHingaz; 03-13-2009 at 07:42 AM.
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audio, audio interface, computer, drums, home, home recording, instrument, interface, latency, m-audio, mic, midi, mix, mixing, phantom power, record, recording, soundcard, stereo

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