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Ricardo Dias;79808 wrote: Hi Michael! We have a DDX3216 in our company. It has version 1.1 installed and it has problems. I sent an e-mail to the care department but it came back twice.
Can you help me? Thank you in advance Hi Ricardo, welcome to the forums! I'll be glad to assist you with this. Just go ahead and send me a private message with your contact information (specifically your Name, the Email Address you used to contact CARE and your Phone number) and I can get someone from our CARE department to reach out to you directly. Look forward to hearing from you.
Behringer DDX3216 presets request -Does anyone know of an existing link to download some presets for the old DDX3216? I have recently acquired one second-hand, and, it seems that only the general FX library is in memory,not the EQ,gate or compression ones.or is that normal? Shop for the Behringer DDX3216 Digital Mixer and receive free shipping on your order and the guaranteed lowest price.
It's hard to describe Behringer's new DDX3216 digital mixer without sounding like an infomercial. What if I told you that this board lists for $1,999 and has a potential 32 simultaneously available inputs, 4 internal effects processors, full dynamic and snapshot automation, and a total of 17 ALPS 100 mm motorized faders? That's not enough?
Then what if I threw in a total of 6 D/A converters, 12 mic/line inputs and 4 line inputs, and parametric EQ and dynamics on every channel? What, you want more? Okay, how about 16-stage LED meters next to each fader and 17 Channel Control lighted rotary encoders? The DDX3216 is that kind of product. It's not that those features are revolutionary — it's that you get them all on a mixer that costs less than $2,000. The features just keep piling up: 24-bit conversion, SMPTE time-code input, MIDI Time Code (MTC) input and output (the unit can generate MTC), word-clock in and out, and even a PC Card slot for storing settings and mixes.
Clearly, Behringer has done a championship job in the features-per-dollar category (actually, make that features-per-euro — the company is German). Speaking of faders, they are one of the first things you notice about the DDX3216. They feel every bit as good as the motorized faders on some higher-end digital mixers, and they're considerably quieter than many. Motorized faders tend to chatter loudly when they're paired or grouped with others; these barely peep. However, you don't want to push down on the faders too hard, or they'll bottom out.
They're not touch sensitive, either, which means they can't automatically “feel” when you're punching in replacement fader-automation moves. Still, if they were spaced farther apart and had larger finger pads, the faders would feel perfectly at home on a digital console costing more than twice as much. The LCDs on most midpriced digital mixers are two times the size of the DDX3216's, which means you're going to be doing some window-hopping. But the menus are well organized, the graphics are clear, and the six knobs and four buttons dedicated to screen navigation let you move around pretty quickly. Also, the LED meters next to the channels take the place of the onscreen meters on other digital mixers, saving screen real estate and making it unnecessary for Behringer to offer a meter bridge.
The DDX3216 has much in common with other digital mixers, so those people who have worked with other units should be able to find their way around this board pretty easily with only a cursory read of the manual. The unit's faders are layered into banks, with the topmost row of buttons determining the active layer (channels 1 through 16, 17 through 32, bus outs, or sends). Below that, in the switch matrix, buttons determine what the Channel Control rotary encoders (one per channel) adjust: pans, send levels to one of the four auxes, or levels to one of the four effects processors. Each knob is encircled by 12 lighted “spokes” to indicate its approximate position. Actual resolutions, however, are much finer than those indicated by positions of the spoke lights. Individual channel settings — routing, EQ, gating, compression, and delay (which is available only on analog channels 1 through 16) — are accessed by a shared set of buttons.
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