I had a friend on the ne-raves list years ago who would SWEAR by the quality and durability of peavey dj mixers. I don't know if they are still any good, but here's one for $500
http://www.topdjgear.com/peclmixprdjm.html granted, the layout of the controls on that mixer is pretty retarded, especially putting the crossfader toggles so close to the crossfader itself that they seem like they could be bumped in the mix, but it's relatively inexpensive. On Nov 5, 2007 3:12 PM, kent williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I've never understood why DJ Mixers are A) so expensive and B) so > poorly built that the regularly fail when used as they were designed > to be used. There really isn't a sturdy, dependable DJ mixer around > for less than $750. For that kind of money, I could build my own. > > > > On Nov 5, 2007 8:28 AM, robin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > That's why i've pointed the last Allen & Heath Xone:42. > > > The new Mackie d.4 Pro has nice features too, and i've been told that the > > > sound quality is pretty nice as well. > > > I need to make a choice between theses both. > > > > > > http://www.allen-heath.com/UK/DisplayProduct.asp?pview=75 > > > > I didn't know that existed. > > > > Looks quite nice, though it's very expensive for what you get and the > > xone 62, which was a little cheaper, is more flexible. > > > > Is this digital or a digital/analogue hybrid I wonder? > > > > robin... > > > -- peace, frank dj mix archive: http://www.deejaycountzero.com
