
All credible reviewers who analyze and rate these products choose Amplifier Mixer. Some of them cover the Amplifier Mixer in lengthy and well-detailed non-comparative reviews. Here are some links for Amplifier Mixer that contain comments from these reviewers.
amplifier mixer question? confuse??? (10 ponts to the best answer)?
ok...so this thing where I plug my electric guitar says it's a "professional mixer amplifier", but then i searched in the internet and it said that it's a speaker???? as i said before, this is where I plug my Amplifier Mixer electric guitar, and it just doesn't sound right, so im planning on buying a distortion pedal. Im just wondering if i plug the distortion pedal into my electric guitar and to this thingy (i dont know if i should call it a speak or amplifier cuz im really confused) will the distortion pedal work? so, in short question... will the distortion pedal work on a speaker? (cuz im not sure if that a speaker or an amplifier) just in case u guys are wondering what this "thing" is, it's a Stagg MPAS 80/12.... i'll give 10 points to the best answer....
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Why not? Just use the correct cables and make sure the speakers you use can handle the power of the amp.
I was just googling and came across this product hope it helps youPyle PMXL8 Power Mixer8 Mono Input channels w gold plated XLR Balanced Inputs Ultra-Low noise discrete Mic Preamps with +48 V Phantom Power 0/2 Stereo Input Channels w/ Balanced TRS Jacks Extremely High Headroom offering more dynamic range Balanced Inputs for highest signal integrity Ultra-Musical 3-Band EQ+FREQ on all Mono Channels and 4-band EQ on all stereo channels Peak LED’s all Mono and Stereo Channels 2 AUX Send per Channel for External Effect and Monitoring Digital of the effect system inside Separate master Mix/ Control Room and Headphone Outputs 2 Track Inputs Assignable to Master Mix/ Control/ Headphone Output Highly Accurate 10 Segment bargraph Meters Power Amplifier Output Impedance: 2 x 500 W 4 Ohm 110 Volt/ 220 Volt Switchable Dimensions: 20”H x 19”W x 7”Dhttp://www.amazon.com/Pyle-PMXL8-Power-Mixer/dp/B0013CH8HM/?tag=klnprk-20Behringer Europower EP4000 Professional 4,000-Watt Stereo Power Amplifier with Atr (Accelerated Transient Response) Technology*2 x 2,000 Watts into 2 Ohms; 2 x 1,400 Watts into 4 Ohms; 4,000 Watts into 4 Ohms (bridge mode)*Precise Power, Signal and Clip LEDs to monitor performance*XLR and 1/4″ TRS input connectors for compatibility with any source*Professional speaker connectors and “touch-proof” binding posts support most speaker wiring systems*Selectable low-frequency filters (30 Hz or 50 Hz) remove distracting infra-sound frequencieshttp://www.amazon.com/Behringer-EP4000-Professional-Accelerated-Technology/dp/B001U5JFNM/?tag=klnprk-20Also check out at Ebay http://rover.ebay.com/rover/1/711-53200-19255-0/1?ff3=4&pub=5574865779&toolid=10001&campid=5336440665&customid=klnprk&mpre=http%3a%2f%2fshop.ebay.com%2fi.html%3f_nkw%3dBehringer%2bEuropower%2bEP4000%26_sacat%3d0%26_odkw%3dmusic%26_osacat%3d0%26_trksid%3dp3286.c0.m270.l1313
depends what kind of speakers you have, if you have powered PA speakers, they have amplifiers built into them. if you have other kinds, then you need an amplifier. mixers have nothing to do with that, only the speakers do
Just a straight cable. http://www.korg.com/product.aspx?pd=128 The line out jack to the line in jack of the mixer.Did you get the Tascam?
I recommend an “all-in-one” system for home karaoke. They contain all the popular features, come in a variety of power ranges, and are easily portable (for taking to a party for example). You can find the largest variety and best prices on these at http://store.yahoo.com/cgi-bin/clink?acekaraoke+9xwDVM+all-in-one-systems.html
Out-puts of the Mixer got to the Pre-(amp) Ins of the Amplifier.
A preamp and power amp are two very different things. The preamp is volume, tone, selection, inputs at a constant voltage. The power amp makes it LOUD. In the home theater amp, there is one preamp and 5 power amps, one for each speaker. In the mixer there is a multichannel preamp (mixer), and an amp for each speaker, usually two. Some mixers have amps, although most don’t. The inputs on the mixer are for line level, (recorded music source) instruments, or mikes before amplification. You cannot double amplify. If you do not understand this, find some one who does before you blow up your speakers. Speaker rating is meaningless. Playing music loud in your home only uses about 5 or so watts. And, watts are meaningless too. You need high current (read high quality) for PA work as the current demand (work load) is high. Cheap amps can’t supply enough current, then the amp clips (distorts) sends a distorted signal to the speakers and fries the voice coil. That’s what blows up speakers. A 30 watt Denon sounds better and plays louder than a 100 watt SONY with less distortion, and cost 3X as much. My suggestion, rent a proper PA system and NEVER use your home speakers for PA work. PA speakers are very different than home speakers. They can take the abuse. As far as your original question goes, it sounds like you want to take the amplified (speaker level) output form the home theater amp and go into the mixing board. The answer is DON’T EVEN THINK ABOUT IT. You will have so much distortion that your speakers will turn to jelly the minute you turn it up.
Mark – Very easy. Get a standard 3.5mm to RCA cable:http://www.adorama.com/HOCMR203.htmlConnect the headphone end to the laptop headphone output and the RCA ends to the mixer inputs. Connect the output of the mixer to the amp input. Connect the speakers to the amp outputs.