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2 reviews from our community
Please note that the following reviews have not yet been verified for authenticity

"All great, it’s super."
All great, it’s super.

"It was exactly what was described"
It was exactly what was described
3 reasons why people want to buy it
Actual feedback of people who want to buy Presonus StudioLive AR12c
- "It' looks nice to me"A 17 y.o. or younger male fan of Jimmy Page from Bulgaria
- "As an upcoming artist musician/actor i think it would go really well along this path to me being able to share my music with the world"A 18-24 y.o. male fan of M83 from Romania
- "Everything"A 18-24 y.o. male fan of Jimi Hendrix from Croatia
People that took the "IS IT GOOD FOR ME?" test said they wanted to buy Presonus StudioLive AR12c for the above 3 reasons. Their opinion is based on their own independent research and should help in your own purchase decision.
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"A channel-rich, budget-friendly analog mixer with built-in USB and one-knob compressors."
Review of Behringer Xenyx X2222USB HP Bundle
I came at the Xenyx X2222USB from the point of view of someone who needs lots of I/O and flexible routing for small band rehearsals and project-studio tracking, but without spending boutique prices. In my time with the desk I leaned on those 8 XENYX mic preamps, the one-knob compressors, the internal FX and the USB I/O for quick stereo recordings and patching between instruments and my DAW.
First Impressions
Out of the box the X2222USB feels heavier and more solid than I expected for the price - the all-steel chassis and the long-throw 60 mm faders give it a grounded presence on my desk. My first setup was straightforward: microphones into channels 1-8, a couple of line sources into the stereo channels, and a quick USB connection to my laptop to test playback and recording.
Design & Features
The layout is classic Behringer practicality - clear channel strips with dedicated gain, compressor knob with LED indicator, 3-band EQ on mono channels with a semi-parametric mid, and inserts on each mono channel for outboard processing. There are two subgroups, three aux sends, three stereo returns and a built-in 24-bit effects engine with 16 editable presets, plus a single USB-B port for stereo computer I/O - everything you need for small live rigs and a home studio without fuss.
Build Quality & Protection
I appreciate the metal chassis and the feel of the knobs and faders - they’re not luxe but they’re serviceable and have held up to frequent patching and live practice sessions. The included rack-mount kit is a nice touch if you want to secure the desk in a flight case or a small rack, though I did notice that the XLR sockets and some rotary pots feel like parts that could take more abuse before needing service.
Sound & Performance
Sonically the X2222USB is surprisingly musical for the price - the XENYX preamps deliver clean gain with reasonable headroom and the one-knob compressors do exactly what they say: tame peaks quickly and transparently for vocals and DI'd instruments. The built-in FX are useful for quick monitoring and rough mixes, though they are not a substitute for high-end outboard reverbs or delays if you need studio-grade ambience.
Usability & Routing
The routing options are generous - I used the subgroups for drum and guitar mixes, the aux sends for foldback and an external reverb unit, then used the stereo returns to bring the external effects back in cleanly. The USB connection is plug-and-play for stereo two-track recording and playback, which made quick reference tracks and livestreaming very easy, but it is important to remember the USB path is a stereo I/O - you can’t stream each channel separately over USB to DAW as a multi-track interface.
The Trade-Offs
You pay for flexibility and channel count rather than boutique tolerances - I experienced occasional quirks that other users have reported, like intermittent control-room/headphone noise on one unit and a handful of posts noting input jacks or pots failing under heavy gigging. If you need rock-solid, long-term reliability for nightly touring, you may want to budget for a higher-tier desk, but for rehearsals, houses of worship, podcasting and small studio projects the X2222USB is a strong value proposition.
Real-World Experience
I ran a five-piece rehearsal through the mixer - three vocal mics, DI bass, electric guitar amp mic and a stereo keyboard - and I had plenty of inputs left for backing tracks and a drum submix. The compressors were lifesavers on vocal dynamics, and switching between the internal FX and an external Lexicon reverb was seamless thanks to the aux returns. For quick stereo stems to take home and rough mixes to share with bandmates, the USB two-track workflow was fast and reliable once I confirmed routing and driver settings on my laptop.
Final Verdict
The Xenyx X2222USB is an excellent option if you want a lot of channels, flexible routing, and recording convenience on a modest budget - it’s ideal for rehearsal rooms, modest live gigs, streamers, and home studios. Be realistic about the limitations: the USB path is stereo-only, build quality is good but not industrial, and long-term reliability varies by unit, so buy from a retailer with a solid return policy if you rely on it night after night.
by Musicngear Verified Community ReviewsHelpful Tips & Answers
- Can I record each channel separately over USB?
- In my experience the mixer’s USB connection provides a stereo two-track I/O, not multi-channel individual channel streams to the DAW.
- Do the one-knob compressors sound natural on vocals?
- I found them very usable - they quickly controlled peaks and sat vocals in the mix without obvious pumping when set conservatively.
- Is phantom power available for condenser mics?
- Yes - the mic channels provide +48V phantom power which I used successfully with small-diaphragm condensers for acoustic recordings.
- How practical is it for live band use?
- It’s very practical for small bands and venues - lots of inputs and subgroups make stage routing simple, though I’d be cautious using it for heavy tour-duty without spares.
- Are the built-in effects usable for monitoring?
- Absolutely - they’re perfect for foldback and quick ambience on vocals, though I swapped in a better outboard reverb for final tracking when I needed more polish.

"A compact, broadcast-focused rackmount mixer built for radio production with sensible I/O and USB integration."
Review of D&R Airmate USB Radio Production
I tested the D&R Airmate USB Radio Production console as my go-to small studio/production desk for a few weeks, using it for podcast episodes, voiceover work and a couple of streamed radio-style shows. My aim was to judge whether a compact, rackmount broadcast mixer can really replace a larger on-air desk for daily production tasks while remaining flexible enough to handle phone-ins, USB sources and a small mic lineup.
First Impressions
Out of the case the Airmate looks and feels like classic broadcast hardware - functional metal front, clear labeling and a radio-centric control layout that puts talkback, clean feed and announcer routing front and center. It sits in a 19" rack footprint (tall for a rackmount box) and the fader spacing, button size and the tactile feel of the pots left me in no doubt this is designed for frequent hands-on use rather than as a hidden control surface.
Design & Features
The Airmate I used features triple input modules per channel - microphone/XLR with 48V phantom and insert, plus selectable line/phono options on RCA for production sources - which made patching jingles and archive material trivial. The USB implementation supports full USB 2.0 playback and record, and the unit can be configured with telephone hybrids or VoIP modules on the back, giving real-world routing for phone-ins and remote guests without extra dongles. I appreciated the dedicated on-air/production section - self-op switching, clean feed and announcer outputs are all present and behave predictably during multi-person sessions.
Build Quality & Protection
The chassis is solid steel and the front panel layout is resilient rather than flashy - perfect for a production room where gear gets used hard. Faders are smooth with a broadcast-appropriate throw and switches have a satisfying mechanical action; there was no creak or loose hardware across the unit I used, and the rear connectors are robust enough for frequent re-patching in a studio environment.
Connectivity & I/O
Connectivity is where the Airmate really earns its keep - balanced XLR main outputs at +4 dBu, multiple stereo RCA returns, dedicated clean-feed and announcer outputs, headphone and announcer outputs with split control, and the option to add AES/EBU outputs or RIAA phono preamps if you need them. The telephone hybrid implementation is solid for live phone-ins, and when VoIP modules are fitted you get USB connectors in place of RJ11 to tie a computer into the mix directly - something I used to pull a remote guest into a show without adding extra routing hardware.
Playability & Usability
Operating the console felt intuitive once I set up my cue and follow-phones preferences - the balance control between main and cue is handy for fast switching, and the large talkback switch is an actual time-saver for production workflow. For single-operator shows the self-op switching behaved as advertised, cutting control room output when the DJ mic was active, which made live transitions less fiddly and kept guests from hearing stage chatter.
Real-World Experience
I ran a week of podcast sessions and two one-hour live streams through the Airmate and found the mic preamps clean and conservative in their character - they didn't add anything unwanted and sat well with typical broadcast-style compression and EQ. USB recording and playback were reliable for my workflow; I recorded stems to a DAW and played back pre-recorded inserts through the RCA inputs without latency issues that affected on-air timing, though I did watch for ground-loop noise when connecting laptops until I isolated the USB ground on one laptop setup.
The Trade-Offs
You give up some modern conveniences to get a purpose-built broadcast desk - there is no touchscreen, no integrated multitrack USB interface with dozens of channels, and the unit's feature set is intentionally conservative compared with a DAW-centric interface. Also, depending on the model the unit expects 230V mains which could require a transformer for use in some regions, so check your local configuration before buying. Finally, the rack height is larger than a half-rack and does require appropriate rack space planning in compact installations.
Final Verdict
For anyone building a small production studio, podcast room or internet radio setup where broadcast-focused routing, built-in hybrids and reliable analog I/O matter, the Airmate USB is a practical, well-built solution that gets out of the way and lets you run shows. I would recommend it to single-operator stations and production rooms that want hardware reliability and broadcast workflow features without the overhead of a full-sized on-air console - just be mindful of rack space and power configuration beforehand.
by Musicngear Verified Community ReviewsHelpful Tips & Answers
- How many mic channels does the Airmate provide?
- On the version I used the Airmate offers multiple mic channels with balanced XLRs and 48V phantom on each mic input, enough for a small production team.
- Does the USB function allow both playback and recording?
- Yes - the USB interface supports full USB 2.0 playback and record mode, which I used to stream and record to my DAW simultaneously.
- Can I connect phone callers directly to the mixer?
- Yes - the Airmate can be fitted with telephone hybrid (POTS) modules and also has options for VoIP modules, so phone-ins are straightforward to handle on-air.
- Is the unit suitable for a small home studio or only professional broadcast rooms?
- I found it perfectly suitable for a home production studio that needs broadcast-style routing; it just requires a bit more rack space than a desktop mixer.
- Are there digital outputs like AES if I want to patch into a digital chain?
- Yes - there is an option for AES/EBU digital stereo output if you need to integrate into a digital signal chain, and I tested analog/XLR outputs without issue.
- How does talkback and clean-feed routing behave in practice?
- Talkback is large and obvious, and the clean-feed/announcer outputs are easy to toggle; in practice I used the clean-feed to drive an external hybrid and it worked reliably.
- Any gotchas with powering or regional compatibility?
- Check the mains configuration - some listings indicate this model runs on 230V so you may need a transformer or region-specific variant for 110V mains.

"great sounding eq and preamps...."
Review of Allen & Heath GSR24M great sounding eq and preamps. Limitless routing, looks great ...


