Agreed, but i like running on battery, easier and faster setup, less things to plug in, i do 2 sets a night, each sets is 2 hours, some more, an 80% charge can last me the whole night, usually on my 2nd gig i started checkin on my battery, if it hits 25% then i charge, but i rarely charge at the club, mostly at home
My daily setup is aimed to be clutter free and wireless, my midi controller and headphones are wireless, i can go on booth and plug in just 1 cable to the mixer and go
Hell if they figured out wireless usb i probably gonna use that LOL
Oh I’m fully with you on the simplicity front, I hate cables and setup time (probs why I bought a Prime 2 for gigs), but power is a dealbreaker for me, I don’t trust the DJ software to work as optimally.
We need these hardware companies to pull their fingers out and start updating all their gear to give power delivery, things like the RMX-95 it’s crazy it didn’t come with USB-C in the first place, seeing as Djay is the only software it works with
Yes wireless everything would be awesome, I can see things going that with with advent of latency free P.A systems and Headphones. I think we are still quite a bit of time away from that bing the norm tho.
I am considering these for my next set of headphones, I currently use IEMs at the moment tho to better protect my hearing in certain clubs but the wireless headphones are soon tempting! Is the sound insulation good?
Hey @echa0361@STU-C and @SamJam, I’ve moved these comments to their own topic to keep the other one more organized. Also, this is an interesting discussion that deserves it’s own topic. Thanks!
I just picked up a mixstream pro go and considering it has a built in battery, operating system, and speakers, being completely unplugged and wireless is amazing.
there is a wireless method im aware of, which would pair controllers wirelessly… through a android mobile based phone over a network basically using a program called “virtualhere”
whether or not it is suitable for your use case is another matter
Hi @sale121kim, welcome to the Community! Thanks for the input. Please use search and do not create new topics for the same subject. I’ve merged your new one with this existing one. Thanks!
indeed: there will always be a latency aspect in wireless comms at the consumer level - start getting into commercial and industrial protocols and it gets very short, especially in the fully digital world
Well, technically, it was a cheap $20 transmitter/receiver setup, but it got nearly the exact same results. No noticeable latency at all. Can still beat match and mix. Can use pretty much any headphones you want.