Just because we're talking about how we work, I should say that I don't "need" my mixer as an alternative to an interface. I have a, largely unused, 828 and the Expert Sleepers ADAT input output modules for it that I could use it in place of the mixer. I also have more than a few other mixers.foosnark wrote: Wed Sep 03, 2025 1:49 pm I have dedicated inputs for bass, the Minibrute/Strega pair, two stereo send/return loops for pedals, and 10 ins and 8 outs in my Euro rig -- no need for a patch bay or hardware mixer. (I do use pass-thru patch panels to conveniently patch from Euro to Witchbrute.
I use an Allen and Heath CQ-18T. The point of that mixer is that it is small, rack mountable, has the jacks on the front and is, in essence, the mixing part of a DAW, complete with dynamics and EQ processing pulled into a small box with a touch screen and a sub 1ms latency from any input to any output. It's not, for me, a performance mixer. I never adjust the EQ live, or ride the non-existent faders. It's not for that. It's for plugging in final voices and then using EQ and dynamics to shape them before they go into the final mix. It has send effects, but I don't use them that much. They are there if I need to use the mixer for more traditional duties, e.g., recording vocals and guitar.
In addition, it has auto gain set which works very well in this application. If I plug something in that's too hot it adjusts the gain carefully and automatically. It records any of the signals that I want to record to an SD card. It also has presets so that I can recall studio setups to avoid setting up all of that kind of thing every time. So, it's more than a mixer really, it's an extremely low latency mixer with built in channel effects and a multi-track recorder all built into one very durable box. It also happens to be a USB interface, but I don't really use it for that.
I use a DJ mixer as a final performance mixer. That's where I have level and filter controls, as well as send effects. Moreover, I can feed the DJ Mixer output back into the CQ18T and record the DJ performance output as well. Since the latency is so low, there really aren't any cueing issues that one might experience with a DAW based approach trying to queue devices on both sides of any latency barrier. While this isn't common, it does happen. I can correct this if I want later in the DAW, but the point here is that I absolutely could tell while listening if I was using a DAW for this setup.