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MacGyver
Location: St Paul, Minnesota Gender: Male Total Likes: 0 likes
"Someone go find me a paperclip, a D-cell battery, and a cheese grater"
| | | Re: Help with a digital DJ setup < Reply # 2 on 10/5/2004 5:02 PM > | Reply with Quote
| | | What you want to do isn't hard at all. It's actually one of the easiest things to set up in the grand scheme of professional audio. Provided you can borrow or rent the right equipment, you shouldn't have any problems. Try talking to an upscale garage band if you know any to see if they have equipment you could borrow. Renting is never cheap (unfirtunately) but will guarantee you get what you need. If you can rent a small mixing console (you shouldn't need any more channels than you can count on one hand), a set of speakers, and an amplifier, you should be able to make it work without a hitch. To get the computer's sound into the mixer, use a cable with a stereo 1/8" jack on one end and dual RCA connectors on the other (this is an extremely common cable, available at your local Radio Hack in various lengths). You might be able to connect the RCA ends directly to a stereo channel on the board, but most commonly you will need a pair of RCA to 1/4" mono adapters. These plug directly onto the RCA ends of your cable and essentially make it into a cable that converts from one stereo 1/8" to two mono 1/4" connectors. Use two channels next to eachother and Plug one 1/4" end into each one. One channel for left, one for right. If you are running a stereo setup (separate amplifier channels, stereo-capable mixer), then you can turn the balance on these channels to opposite sides to pass the left channel of the sound card only to the left channel of the amplifier, and vice versa. Setting the gains on the mixer is best done by turning the gains all the way down on both the amp and the mixer, setting the volume control on the computer to the maximum, setting the sliders on the mixer to the level mark (0db). Now start some music on the computer, making sure not to pick a quiet song. Something like Metallica or Def Leppard should do nicely. Once the music is playing, turn the gains on the mixer up slowly until the peak/clip lights just begin to flicker, then back the gains down a twitch for some head room. Now, with the music still playing, turn on the amplifier and begin turning it's gains up until the volume is at the desired level. Now you will be able to kill the music and adjust it's volume from the mixer as well as having a DJ mic hooked up for cheesy commentary or announcements at the same time. You could hook a second computer or CD player up as well, using the same procedure, to blend between songs and keep things qued up.
| Like a fiend with his dope / a drunkard his wine / a man will have lust for the lure of the mine "If you are not part of the solution, you are not dissolved in the solvent." |
| Professor Chaos Noble Donor
Location: Halifax, NS Gender: Male Total Likes: 8 likes
| | | | Re: Help with a digital DJ setup < Reply # 4 on 10/5/2004 8:23 PM > | Reply with Quote
| | | First off, if you use MP3s, make sure they are MINIMUM 192Kbps. Anything lower will sould like crap. As for gear, get a pair of decent powered speakers. They are a breeze to set up and are idiot proof. Set them up on stands, plug them in and press power. They also have built in protection in case you or someone else pushes them beyond their output. Some of the speakers I use a lot and HIGHY recommand are: Mackie SRM-450 EV (Electro-Voice) SxA-250 I persoannlly use the Mackie SRM-450 for monitors up in the dj booth and love them! Both these speakers sound very good and are easy to set up. Get also a small mxixer / preamp to patch the sound from the computer. Make sure it has BALANCED XLR outputs if you plan on using powered speakers. That way, if the speaker lines are longer than 25 feet, you will still get a loud signal with out any buzz or interference. Something like a Mackie 1202 Vlz-Pro should work nicely. JUST DONT GET A BEHRINGER MIXER. Run the outputs of the mixer to the inputs of the speakers and thats about it. As for the computer, I've got a copy of PCDJ FX VRM I can hook you up with. I don't persoannlly use it (I use turntables and cds when I mix) but it lets you haver play lists and all you want to do. http://www.pcdj.com/Products/FX.asp Any more questions, just ask. **I cant find my copy of PCDJ. Ill try to look on my backup cds.
[last edit 10/5/2004 8:27 PM by Professor Chaos - edited 1 times]
| "Toyota vehicles are marketed to people who would be more excited about getting a new fridge than a new car I think." -Bandi |
| Frost
Location: K.Dot Gender: Male Total Likes: 0 likes
No beer makes Frosty go..something something..(Taz: Crrazzy?)..Dont mind if I doo!
| | | | Re: Help with a digital DJ setup < Reply # 7 on 10/6/2004 12:06 AM > | Reply with Quote
| | | Wow, I'm not sure if I'm more confused now or not hehe, but thank you for all the advice... like I said it's been a while, that and I've never actually hooked a computer to sound system. The equipment I'm renting is good quality, don't ask me the name, but I'm positive it's not the bad one you're talking about, the company I'm going to get it from supplies this area and it's schools with equipment, that's where I used to get stuff while I was in school with the AV club. My brother-in-law paid I think $300 for a board, two speakers, a mic, and a cd player for his wedding, so it's a good deal, compared to the insane amount for a DJ.... so yea, I think I can swing something decent. Now I just need to borrow a laptop hehe...
| Why is marijuana not legal? Why is marijuana not legal? Its a natural plant that grows in the dirt. You know what's not natural, 80 year old dudes with hardons. Thats not natural, but we got pills for that. We're dedicating all our resources to keeping the old guys erect but we're puttin people in jail for smoking something that grows in the dirt. |
| Stalker
Location: Hamilton Gender: Neither Total Likes: 1 like
Your Resident Red Commie Bastard
| | | Re: Help with a digital DJ setup < Reply # 10 on 10/18/2004 6:59 AM > | Reply with Quote
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| mewthree
Location: Montreal, Quebec, Canada Gender: Male Total Likes: 19 likes
| | | | Re: Help with a digital DJ setup < Reply # 12 on 8/18/2008 3:36 PM > | Reply with Quote
| | | you mean like serato with time coded vinyl?? I did a gig for my music the other day. I was basically forced to do it "DJ style" because I didn't have the time to program all my samples and sounds to be played and triggered in real time, so I just made 320 mp3's of my tracks. My setup was this: - quadcore desktop with virtual dj as the software (was going to use deckadance, but it had a bug so I chose an older program that was more reliable with less bells and whistles) - 1/8" stereo to two-1/4" mono adapter cable (not bought at radio shack) - studiomaster 10 channel mixer (I got a good deal on this mixer, and it sounds great, no crosstalk at all, no noise) - in my rack I have a furman power conditioner, two ART 3rd of an octave EQ's (one left one right), a behringer 3 channel crossover, that I got a great deal for a new one... though I am shocked it works well, because normally I would never buy anything from them, a crest amp (about 250 a side), and a crown amp (about 110 a side) the crest amp is currently used for a pair of yorkville pulse 153 speakers, chich actually sound pretty good. Crisp highs and punchy sounding too. the crown amp is currently bridged mono for my subwoofer, which has two JBL E-140's in it, however soon I will be taking those woofers out to put them into a pair of JBL woofer cabs that has the scoop underneath (vintage model, but I forget the model name) My opinion on behringer, I dont know what kind of stuff they all make, but stay away from their mixers... especially if you are using it for the studio. My crossover currently works fine, but I am very gentle with it, because the pots and clicker buttons on it seem very very cheap and easy to break. there is a limiter on it which works fine, and there is also a low freq filter that cuts out stuff under 20hz which also seems to work fine... but I suspect this unit will be the first thing to go on my system. I am going to need to get a few more power amps soon and some more speakers to put in the various speaker cabs I have. I am not a huge fan of the eon style plastic cases a lot of these powered speakers come in, I mean i would use them for monitors, but I dont like most of them as main sound. Although mackie makes some loud ones (their bigger ones) And I hear electrovoice makes some OK ones too though I have yet to hear them.
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