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When sent to the computer from this point in the signal path, the audio is unaffected by the channel faders, pan position and mute status. Next in the strip are a set of small switches accompanied by the distinctive Firewire symbol. The EQ is a simple three-band design and Phonic have helpfully written each band's frequency on the chassis: 12kHz at the top, 80Hz at the bottom and 2.5kHz in the centre, with each band providing adjustment of up to ☑5dB. These do not share the same channel facilities - such as EQ, for example - as the others, but have their own controls over in the master section on the right.įor the first eight channels, though, all things are more or less equal. The remaining four channels, earning the mixer the '12' in its name, are aux returns paired up and labelled 1 and 2. The next four, organised as two paired channels, have no gain knob, just a -10dBv to +4dBu switch, and are intended to receive signal from sound modules with plenty of level. The preamps of the first four channels offer 50db of adjustable gain and a low-cut filter positioned at 75Hz. Clearly, the mixer's size is optimised so that it can sit on a small desk with computer monitors and peripherals, rather than atop a rack. A couple more inches have been shaved off the design by using rotary knobs rather than linear channel-level faders. What isn't necessarily so apparent from the pictures, however, is that the mixer is exceptionally compact, saving lateral space by pairing channel 4 with 5 and channel 6 with 7, and reducing the other axis dimension by using thin pots and placing many of them very close together. As one would expect, the channels are lined up with their relevant inputs, the monitoring and metering controls can be found on the right, and the slightly more miscellaneous I/O is at the rear. The Helix follows an extremely traditional hardware mixer layout which should be fairly evident from the photograph in this review.
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#PHONIC HELIX BOARD 18 MK2 FULL#
A copy of Cubase LE is bundled free with the mixer, as is the relevant setup software, and there is full support for both Mac and PC.Īlthough there are also larger 18- and 24-channel Helix mixers offering up to 18 outs over Firewire, they share an almost identical core of features with our 10-channel review model, so most of what is said here should be applicable to the rest of the range. It is now possible to output individual tracks over Firewire at up to 24-bit/96kHz, and from a choice of different points in each channel's signal path. Two years on, Phonic seem to be favouring Firewire over USB, and have integrated the technology much more convincingly.
#PHONIC HELIX BOARD 18 MK2 PROFESSIONAL#
In the summer of 2005 they took their tried and tested mixer hardware and added a USB send, declaring their new Helix Boards to be "the world's first professional USB-equipped mixers." The concept was good, but the design could only send the stereo mix as an output, rather than individual channels, and the screen printing barely acknowledged that the USB interface was present. Phonic, who celebrate their 30th birthday this year, have a lot of experience of making robust analogue mixers for use in the studio and on stage. Using: Win7 / i7-Q740 / 8GB Ram / Ableton 8.1.Phonic's well-established Helix range has made the jump to Firewire: we look at the 12-channel version, which is capable of sending 10 channels of audio at 24-bit/96kHz to your DAW. But it looks so dumb.Īnother question: is there a way to record my fader movements? At the moment I'm just recording a pre-fader of every channel, and it seems no midi CCs are being sent to my DAW. The only way I got it "sorted out" is having one of my AUX returning in a channel (wasting a channel) and routing the other to a group, and then assigning that group to the extra channel. Am I doing something wrong? Or is it supposed to be like that for some reason? I found no way to actually record them when I assign AUX-2/3 to my extra channels (that's right, the AUX returns are NOT included in the channels you usually see from your computer) all I hear is actually the SEND signals, so just a dry mix of what I'm sending to those AUXs (both mixed together!). My biggest problem is about the AUX returns in firewire: Much better now I must say, no cable-spaghetti-monsters around, but I'm really disappointed with some of the features, or I should say, the missing ones. I just bought a PHONIC Helix Board 18 FireWire MKII for my studio, it's my first non-analog mixer, I used to wire my mixer's single-outs to my sound card and that was it.