Hi, first of all let me say that as a Music Director for a college radio station, this site has been an amazing resource. I have spent the last few hours just browsing through and learning as much as I can, but to get to my question...
Basically at my station I am the only who was interested in bringing live music to the station and having bands perform. I've spent the last few months learning about mixing and sound engineering from the ground up to try and mix bands and get them live on air. Right now I am using a Mackie 1642-VLZ3 mixer, its great for bands and I'm gotten fairly skilled with it. The problem comes when we connect the Mackie up to our D-16 Digital Audio Console by Audio Arts Engineering. The way that we've been doing it since we got the Mackie, is to disconnect the two vocal mics that are used to talk on-air from the D-16 and connect those xlr's to the main outputs of the Mackie. The problem is that the channels jack up so much that even if everything is mixed and sounding perfectly crisp on the mackie, when you get it to the D-16 it fuzzes out and clips horribly. Everything sounds like a clipping fuzzy mess. I've had to overcompensate for the jacking up on the D-16 by mixing the mackie super low almost to inaudible quietness which then comes out a bit hushed and doesn't sound ideal over the air.
My question is what can I do to the D-16 to have it take the Mackie's signal without jacking up the noise considerably? Is there a setting or something I can change to make it a straight through channel for when I use the Mackie to mix bands? ANY HELP on the topic or my question would be greatly appreciated. Any information or insight that you could give me as well into how radio consoles work in this regard would be amazing. Thank you so much for your time and help!
Basically at my station I am the only who was interested in bringing live music to the station and having bands perform. I've spent the last few months learning about mixing and sound engineering from the ground up to try and mix bands and get them live on air. Right now I am using a Mackie 1642-VLZ3 mixer, its great for bands and I'm gotten fairly skilled with it. The problem comes when we connect the Mackie up to our D-16 Digital Audio Console by Audio Arts Engineering. The way that we've been doing it since we got the Mackie, is to disconnect the two vocal mics that are used to talk on-air from the D-16 and connect those xlr's to the main outputs of the Mackie. The problem is that the channels jack up so much that even if everything is mixed and sounding perfectly crisp on the mackie, when you get it to the D-16 it fuzzes out and clips horribly. Everything sounds like a clipping fuzzy mess. I've had to overcompensate for the jacking up on the D-16 by mixing the mackie super low almost to inaudible quietness which then comes out a bit hushed and doesn't sound ideal over the air.
My question is what can I do to the D-16 to have it take the Mackie's signal without jacking up the noise considerably? Is there a setting or something I can change to make it a straight through channel for when I use the Mackie to mix bands? ANY HELP on the topic or my question would be greatly appreciated. Any information or insight that you could give me as well into how radio consoles work in this regard would be amazing. Thank you so much for your time and help!