The Instrument inputs are all over the place also. Some of it had to do with it being a mic that was closer to one SD16 then the other. I don’t know exactly why they are wired the way they are. Input 5-6 are from A07-A08, input 7 from B08 and input 8 from B05. It used to be that the vocal mics were a mix of hardwired and wireless I am not sure what they are now, they got more wireless mics. For example (the 8 vocal mics) at the moment are on the X32 on inputs 1-4 are wireless mics and the receivers are near the A SD16 and are coming from A01-A04. The inputs are as I said coming from 2 SD16 stage boxes (A SD16 and B SD16) at the moment. This would mean that unless they have patched it in the computer to match the layout of the X32 the computer doesn’t match the layout of the X32. When I mention cross patching I am talking about in the X32 where you select the source for the channel in the channel settings. So it sounds like my assumptions are right. They are still on one of the 3 versions of the firmware. This part of it (USB output) I had nothing to do with. This is in a church and their setup is currently working but not the way they want it to be. See the (crazy) example of a user bank below.ĮDIT: You would then have to select that user bank in the card out menu. Then you can choose freely one ch and source at a time back and forth from many places. If I understand you correctly, cross patched means what the daw is doing? It sort of sounds like you would want to use the user out sources for Card out. Default card out routing is Local ch's 1-32. If for instance your card out routing sources were set to local but you were using s!6's (aes50) you would record nothing. Then you select user out as the category. User in and out will allow you to select individual ch's and ch order freely from any of those 3 menus or a host of other possibilities. If you want tap points beyond the preamps you must also choose "Out 1-8/9-16" "Aux out" or "Ultranet out" and then assign sources and tap points to those menus. Card out routing is where you tell the x32 what sources get recorded. The x-DANTE card - expanding connectivity options for X32 users and integrators.The usb card outs do not blindly follow the mixer input sources unless you tell them to.
This is an economical, yet powerful, way to connect I/O options in the network, allowing your software to handle routing, rather than physical wired links. X-DANTE instantly makes your X32 ready for integration into current installations using the Dante protocol, ensuring reliable sound in large venues such as convention centers, churches or concert halls using standard Ethernet switches (100MBs or 1 Gigabit Ethernet).
Simply add Dante Virtual Soundcard software to your PC or Mac to enable Ethernet-based recording and playback from your favorite DAW or application. Also, replacing your x-USB card doesn't mean you have to give up your recording interface.
When the x-DANTE card is connected to a computer, Audinate's Dante Controller application gives you full control over configuration and signal routing among your Dante-enabled devices. And a secondary input allows you to set up a seamless, redundant network.įull remote control of the X32 is possible using the integrated Ethernet switch.
The x-DANTE card utilizes 24-bit signal transmission with sample-accurate synchronization and low latency, ensuring the highest audio integrity. The X32 ships with the x-USB card in the expansion slot, but by installing the x-DANTE card in this slot, your mixer will interface with Dante networks using either standard 100Mbit/s or Gigabit Network infrastructure with DSCP-based QoS, with support for mixed sample and bit rates coexisting on the same network. The 32-channel 48 kHz bi-directional audio interface brings even more I/O options to the X32 by making it ready for integration with Dante enabled IP networks. The x-DANTE Expansion Card can easily be installed in place of the x-USB card that is included with the X32. The Behringer High-Performance 32-Channel Expansion Card provides flexible and expandable connectivity for many different applications.