No more yelling at one band member to "fix their sound"! And to add to your other post, each person can download an app on their smart device, connect to the wireless access point you set up, and adjust their own mix themselves. By using a different Mix Bus for each musician, everyone gets their own independent mix. STEP 1: You will want to use Aux mixes for IEM mixes (labeled as Mix Bus in the software), not the main mix. And you can start off by having 5 separate mixes - may as well start from where you need to be, right? All routing, labeling, and general levels and panning of things all pre-set and ready to go. The beautiful thing is that you can build all of this offline (not connected to the mixer), directly on your computer with the offline editor software, and then either save to a USB stick or connect your computer to the mixer, and upload to the mixer on the next rehearsal. Second question.is there a better way to do what I'm trying to do, putting the main mix into 5 separate in ear monitors by configuring things to go from 5 separate outputs straight to the IEMs? Eventually we are hoping to have individual headphone mixes controlled with apps.but for now just trying to get the main mix into each of the 5 IEMs.
My problem is that I can't seem to find anywhere that explains how, on the x32 rack (I've seen multiple videos on how to do it on the non rack x32s) to assign it to a matrix.so the first question is how the heck do I do it?
Two questions: first, I can't see in the manual how to actually assign the main mix to a matrix (I was able to configure things such that analog out 1 is matrix 1, analog out 2 is matrix 2.I left outputs 7 and 8 alone because they are the main outs). As I understand it I need to assign the main mix to a matrix that I then assign to one of the analog XLR outputs that I will then plug in to the in ear monitor receiver channel inputs on each transmitter. One of the members of my band purchased an x32 rack to use as a mixer to route sound from our instruments to individual band member in ear monitors.