Originally Posted by
thisisian
Just to clear one thing up. The Denon MC3000 isn't a proper standalone mixer. It's a midi controller.
Yes, it's got audio inputs, but they route straight through to the output bus. ....the only control you have over external inputs is the funny little rotary crossfader to fade between the two inputs.
If you want full mixer functionality, then you want the DN-MC6000. Which is a midi controller & a fully featured DJ mixer.
Here's a quote from the djworx.com review, that explains probably better than I can;
Auxiliary Inputs
The MC-3000’s line-level auxiliary inputs bypass the main mixer controls completely. Instead, you pan between them using a pot, with the first set of inputs being to the left of the pot and the second set of inputs to the right. The effect is like fading between a cued channel and the master with a PFL pot. Sadly, you can’t cue the auxiliary inputs individually, which means you can’t use this system to mix if your laptop malfunctions, and there’s only one volume pot for the auxiliary system anyway. Still, it’s a better auxiliary system than is seen on a lot of controllers at this price and it means you do have some method of fading between tracks should your laptop have a strop.
You can also route the line inputs through Traktor as a live input, so that you can use the MC-3000’s mixer section to mix audio from those sources.
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