Mixers for hands-on musicians.
Mackie designed the DFX Series mixers for folks who don't have the luxury of a
front-of-house sound technician. Working professionals who have to control their own mix
while making music - and have to do their own set-up and tear-down.
What does that mean? It means that the Mackie DFX12 is extremely easy to use.
For example, if you have a front-of-house sound person to control your effects levels, they
can locate a small knob and tweak it.
But if you're on stage, it's a lot easier to grab a big, color-coded fader. Plus you can
see the fader positions from halfway across the stage.
That's the philosophy of the DFX Series: make it easy to control a mixer when you're busy
on stage. Channel faders are white. Effects and Monitor Sends are red, master levels faders
are blue. The Tape/CD level fader is also white but separated from the channel faders. You
get "mixing at a glance."
Every channel has both a Level Set and Overload LED so you can tell at a glance on a dark
stage if one of your inputs is too hot.
And of course, both digital effects and a graphic equalizer are built in, so you don't
have to mess with an extra rack of outboard gear.
Above all, superb sound quality.
What makes an inexpensive mixer sound cheap? Excessive noise and marginal dynamic
headroom. Ask anyone who's upgraded to a Mackie mixer and they'll tell you the first
noticeable difference is that they can load their new Mackie mixer with hot, high-volume inputs
without hearing a lot of distortion. That's due to Mackie's special negative gain mix amp architecture.
This "higher headroom" is especially apparent with mics plugging into Mackie's microphone
preamps. Mackie's circuitry can handle screaming vocalists and close-miked drums without
"breaking up."
Low noise is the other difference between the DFX Series and any comparably-priced
competition. Mackie's mic preamps are quiet. The mixer's main circuitry is quiet. The digital
effects and equalizer are quiet. In fact, you probably won't even be able to tell if your DFX mixer is turned on unless you look at the LED indicators.
Long, logarithmic taper faders.
Instead of little stubby faders, the DFX•6 has generous 60mm faders. And
their log-taper design means that the sound doesn't drop to zero abruptly as you lower the
volume - you have full level control over the complete length of fader travel.
Accurate 32-bit effects.
Mackie's Digital Engineering division applied some of the same technology to the DFX
Series' effects that they use in the $10,000 Digital 8•Bus console they make for major
recording studios.
You get reverb, delay, chorus and thirteen other
EMAC™ effects with ultra-realism that not only sounds better than other effects mixers but also rivals outboard processors costing more than either of these mixers.
Even the features have features.
Greg Mackie is a rabid keyboard player who loves to jam with other musical Mackoids. So
he's developed some features that could only result from hands-on live sound mixer use.
- Effects to Monitor BR. Rarely do you want the same amount of effects in your main PA mix
as you do in your stage monitors. The DFX•12 lets you control the level of stage
monitor effects with a dedicated rotary control.
- Break Switch CL. You finish a set and get ready to leave the stage. But first you have to
mute your mic input channels one-by-one so that some idiot doesn't climb on stage, grab a
microphone and start singing "Happy Birthday." With the DFX Series, you just push the Break
Switch. Mic input channels are automatically muted and the CD/Tape input is live, so you
can play music during the break.
- Graphic equalizer assign. A graphic EQ is twice as handy when you can either assign it
to the main mix (to improve that sound of that aging passive PA system) or to your stage
monitors (to cut feedback and/or boost audibility).
The Vocal Eliminator. Backing tracks for cheap.
If you perform with pre-recorded music - or if your application includes audience karaoke
but not often enough that you carry a whole library of special CDs, the DFX Series can come
to your rescue.
The Mackie DFX-12 has a Vocal Eliminator circuit that can remove the existing lead
singer from most songs. We're not saying it totally eliminates the vocal on every track on
every CD. But it works amazingly well under most circumstances.
Those circumstances have to do with how the Vocal Eliminator works. Using phase
inversion, it "nulls" sounds that are panned to the exact center of the mix - which covers about 99% of
all vocals. Plus it uses an 18dB per octave filter to "notch out" frequencies between 160Hz
and 5Khz - the normal range for most male and female signers. So if the singer on the
recording is a 900-pound basso profundo or can hit higher notes than a canary (or an artsy
producer who insisted on panning the lead vocal to the extreme left or right) , the DFX-12's
Vocal Eliminator won't knock out the whole vocal. But most of the time, the Vocal Eliminator
will give you a karaoke-ready soundtrack from a regular pop, country-western or Christian
contemporary CD.
So what's up with the channel inputs?
The Mackie DFX12 actually includes three flavors of channel strips.
Channels 1 through 4 accept microphones or mono line level sources, just like Channels 1 and
2 on its little brother. Channels 5/6 and 7/8 accept microphones or stereo line level
sources. Channels 9/10 and 11/12 accept stereo line level sources.
This combination gives you maximum versatility: you can run up to four
microphones and four stereo instruments…or you could run one microphone and use all the rest
of the input for instruments and tone modules. Or combinations in between.
Those little extras that make a Mackie mixer a better value - now and in the long-run…
- Low Cut infrasonic filters keep your PA system from getting a woofer hernia. The 75Hz Low
Cut filters on the DFX Series' mono mic channels work wonders at minimizing mic thumps,
stage rumble, wind noise and P-pops - subsonic frequencies that rob amplifier power and make
woofer cones undulate like belly dancers.
- Easy level setting. Correctly setting a mixer's input levels before a gig is critical to
optimizing headroom and minimizing background noise. We make it easy by putting a yellow
level setting LED on each channel strip. Soundcheck the channel, tweak the Trim control
until the light flickers and you're set!
- Sweet, musical EQ. The 12kHz High and 80Hz Low shelving EQ on the DFX Series are placed
at the far ends of the audible musical spectrum (instead of the traditional 100Hz and
10kHz). They're based on the design in our CFX and PPM Series, which are acclaimed for their natural sound. And you can actually use them as a midrange control - gently
cutting both high and low EQ on a channel has the audible effect of boosting midrange, and
vice versa.
- No wall wart! Even Mackie's lowest-priced mixers have built-in power supplies. The DFX12 uses a universal power cord and internal power supply instead of outlet-eating
external power supply modules.
Built to last.
Finally, the DFX Series maintains Mackie's track record of built-like-a-tank durability.
Sealed rotary controls keep out dust, liquids and smoke. Thick fiberglass circuit boards and
metal main chassis resist impacts that send competitors' mixers to the service
department. Special wear-resistant wiper surfaces in the faders won't turn scratchy even
after years of use.
Specifications subject to change without notice
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