Hey guys ,
Brand new to the forum and I’m looking for your guys expertise. I have my first club gig tommorrow night. I’ve been spinning for about a year and finally ready to jump into the club scene.
So at my gig tmrw, I need to bring my own setup. The currently have a pioneer djm 800 mixer. What I’ll be bringing;
MacBook Pro running Traktor 2.03
Traktor Kontrol X1
Numark Mixdeck
Now, before it’s said, I know the mixdeck isn’t a great setup. But it’s an ok midi controller and serves its purpose. The only thing I am concerned about is how is it going to sound on a club system?
Second, Ive been reading a little online and stumbled across a post that said I would need a soundcard (audio 2 at least) to run the X1. Is this correct? Wouldnt the mix decks soundcard do the exact same thing at home for me?
Lastly, so I don’t look like an idiot when I’m doing soundcheck tommorrow , how to I plug my mixdeck into the djm 800. And when it’s plug in(say to channel 1), I would still just use the mixer on the mixdeck , not the djm 800. The dim will basically take the sound from the mixdeck(deck a & b) and distribute through their system…
Does the X1 work at home, together with the Mixdeck? Then it will work here as well.
Just plug your output into one of the channels of the DJM800, leave that channel open and you can do all the EQing stuff on your mixdeck.
Make sure the gain levels are okay, so not low at the one and ridiculously high at the other etc.
Yeah the setup works beautiful at home. Everything is mapped to my style and no glitches. Ill make sure my gain is all equal across the board.
Do you think the mixdeck will keep up with their system? Will I need to change any audio settings in traktor (latency , ect…) or just keep it how it is ?
Latency shouldn’t be an issue. My brother ran a similar setup with his S2 into my DDM4000, and it worked like a charm.
I’m not quite sure what you mean by “keeping up with their system,” but there should ideally be a house sound guy who is in charge of making sure you’re loud enough/etc. Keep it how it is, but be prepared to adjust some output gains if need-be. It shouldn’t be a problem though.
I’d take it a step further and see i you can deactivate the crossfader.
You will start sweating if you bump the crossfader and it takes you some time to realize that your setup is still working ok and the unfamiliar crossfader is the source of your issues.
ALSO!
If your plugging your stuff into a different power source the the speakers. There might be a ground-loop which will cause a hum. You might wanna stop at your local electronic store and grab one of these. That is, if your using RCAs