create your own

Aviom Personal Mixer: A Personal Review

72
rate or flag this page

By Blake Flannery


Interface of the Aviom Personal Mixer
Interface of the Aviom Personal Mixer

Before Aviom Mixers

I play electric guitar at my church, and we just started using Aviom personal mixers. This is my review of the mixer compared to what we had been using. We were using floor monitors, with which I had to share the same mix with two other musicians. One was a vocalist.

Sound check took what seemed like half of our practice time, because we generally had to wait until the end of a song, yell across the gymnasium, and tell the sound guys what we need in our mix. Basically, we would get the sound mix as close to what we want as we can and that was that. Some weeks we could hear the other musicians, some weeks we couldn't. I was grateful for what we had because I have played with less, and our sound guys are pretty good at putting up with our demands.


Aviom Mixer Video

After Aviom Mixer

All of this changed when I used the Aviom personal mixers. I am guessing that sound check for the stage is almost a thing of the past. The controls were very intuitive, and I easily figured out how to mix without any training. I may be taking for granted the time the sound guys spent hooking up everything. I used a cheap pair of in ear headphones ($20) and was amazed at how well I could hear each part. Just the ability to pan, by itself, allowed me a spacial sense that I had never had. Now I could hear the vocals in the center and other instruments right and left. The one function I asked about was saving my settings, which was very simple. I really don't care if the settings are different each week, because it is so easy to mix that it doesn't bother me to change it a little each week.


Be careful your first time using the Aviom personal mixer. You will hear everyone in your in-ear monitors so well that you will hear mistakes. Some of those mistakes might be yours. You might become a little shy in your playing when you realize that everyone can hear as well as you. I suggest adding a condenser mic on stage and feeding a little into your mix.  It will add a depth and fullness to your mix.  Otherwise it may sound too dry.  You might decide you need to change your tone a little bit if you hear your electric guitar though the system and not through poor floor monitors.

All of these are potentials for improvement, so in the long run the Aviom personal mixers will improve what your audience hears. It does this in a few ways:

  • Improved listening to others in the band
  • Improved identification of mistakes
  • Better representation of what is sent to the mains
  • Less time doing sound check, more time practicing



Aviom Mixers

Aviom A16II Personal Monitor Mixer, 16 channels Aviom A16II Personal Monitor Mixer, 16 channels
Price: $620.00
List Price: $534.95
Aviom A16R-AVIOM Personal Monitor Mixer, 16 Channel Rackmount Aviom A16R-AVIOM Personal Monitor Mixer, 16 Channel Rackmount
Price: $965.00
List Price: $980.00
Aviom AN16/O Snake Output Module, 16 channel Aviom AN16/O Snake Output Module, 16 channel
Price: $1,285.00
List Price: $899.95

Pros:

  • Cuts down on sound check time
  • Uses networking cable to power them
  • Easy to use
  • Savable mixes
  • Stereo sound
  • Detailed mixing capabilities

Cons:

  • Expensive to most people
  • Sounds a little complicated to hook up
  • You can hear so well that you hear all of your mistakes

Comments

RSS for comments on this Hub

No comments yet.

Submit a Comment

Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.


optional


  • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
  • Comments are not for promoting your hubs or other sites

working