skelf Posted April 11, 2008 Share Posted April 11, 2008 (edited) Hi Excellent unit in very good condition. Huge number of use's. I am looking for £150 plus delivery. The MX60 Front End One is a unique mic/line/instrument input channel in a single rack space providing high quality Drawmer processing prior to tape/hard disc recording. The MX60 is also ideally suited to project studio and live sound applications. Functioning as a studio grade mic pre-amp, Program AdaptiveTM gate, de-esser, compressor, limiter, three band EQ and multi band tube saturation stage, the MX60 offers the user more options than competitive units currently available. Grass Roots - The MX60 draws its technology from the most successful of Drawmer products. The mic pre-amp features the same discrete component design found in the legendary Drawmer 1960, the de-esser is derived from the MX50, the VCA based compressor is similar to the MX30, while the peak limiter and gate can be tracked back to the DL241 compressor/limiter. Controls: Input Stage: The input stage may be switched to accept mic, line, or instrument level signals - the XLR mic input has switchable 48V phantom power and phase reverse, while the line input is on both a balanced +4dB TRS jack and an unbalanced -10dB jack. A high impedance Instrument jack is located on the front panel for use with electric guitars, basses, synths and drum machines. Program AdaptiveTM Gate: Drawmer's proprietary Program AdaptiveTM circuitry means that all the time constants are automatically optimised for the material being processed. This enables stable gating and eliminates 'chatter' around threshold. Controls via a single variable threshold and switchable fast/slow auto release. De-Esser: Floating threshold de-ess operation where the de-esser automatically and continually readjusts its own threshold level. The MX60 de-esser is almost completely automatic requiring the user only to select a switchable male or female setting and to adjust the amount of de-essing required. Only the sibilant sounds are subjected to gain reduction so that the lisping effect of simpler de-essers is avoided. EQ: High and low shelving sections as well as fully parametric mid range EQ with variable frequency, 'Q', and ±18dB cut/boost. Compressor: High quality VCA compressor based on that of the MX30 and DL241. Both the attack and release times are Program AdaptiveTM leaving the user with only ratio, threshold and make-up gain to adjust. Tubesound: Multi band 'tube saturation' allows users to create subtle warming, high frequency effects or out-and-out obvious effects via three separate, independently adjustable audio bands. Low settings on all bands enable replication of classic tube mic sounds. Output: The output stage includes a limiter with a preset threshold (+16dB) and a variable master fader with output bargraph metering which sets the overall output level from OFF to +15dB. A two stage soft/hard limiting approach has been adopted with yellow and red LEDs signifying soft (approaching limit point) and hard limiting (hitting limit point). Edited May 16, 2008 by skelf Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
skelf Posted April 22, 2008 Author Share Posted April 22, 2008 Bump. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
skelf Posted April 28, 2008 Author Share Posted April 28, 2008 bump Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Maine Posted April 29, 2008 Share Posted April 29, 2008 So, that's the brochure text. What have you been using it for, and how did it work out? Looks pretty good on paper. What were you using it with? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
skelf Posted April 29, 2008 Author Share Posted April 29, 2008 I used it mainly for recording various instruments and vocals. Basically everything I recorded in to my MOTU 896 went through this first. So I used it for mics and direct bass recording I have always like Drawmer gear particularly their compressors. I have used as bass pre-amp as well which it does pretty well. I have sold all my recording gear and have a little Mark head so no longer need it. It is particularly good for digital recording because of the output limiter which stops you running out of headroom and getting horrible digital clipping. Alan Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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