Would recommend this to noobs and people looking for cheap alternative to having more inputs. Not very stable on a table top setup, must be fixated using creativity/other equipment Perfect amount of inputs (2 mic/line and 2 stereo/mono inputs) capable of accommodating 4 instruments of all kinds. I haven't used it via USB so i'm not sure if it supports multi-mix for your DAW via individual channels. Sad that they did not think of this when making it.Īll in all a great bang for the buck, if you're looking for extra inputs to your 2i2 setup (like i was) to plug a little more instruments and jam at the same time. This can be solved easily with velcro or rubber stoppers stuck to it. This was a little annoying when someone accidentally stretches the cable plugged in, if not taken to account, it will easily slide over. The first downside i found was that is does not have rubber fits on the bottom for grip on your table top. The mic channels also have a compressor, not great but definitely useful when jamming with multiple instruments. It does offer USB connectivity if you would like to use it as a sound card itself. It's compact size is awesome for fitting it in your backpack and going for jam sessions, the size does come at a cost though, instead of faders for the channels you have level knobs which is okay but a little less accurate that faders.
It does offer 48v phantom power, which is rare in the price category. The mic preamps seem fine for what you pay for, i still would rather use my sound card when recording. I'v had this mixer a few days in already, i have it connected to my sound card via stereo (irrelevant: my sound card is also Behringer, the 204HD model).įirst thing i want to highlight is don't expect to compare this to mixers in the 400-500? range, it's a cheap product for beginners/intermediate users.