I have this old peavey single amp 6 channel mixer i have used for gigs many times for years. It's an oldie but it has a huge power tranny and weighs a tone. At one point years ago i bought a much newer carvin with lots of features and not antiquated like the old peavey XR600c. Tried it at a couple gigs and while plently loud, no matter how we EQ'd the mics or how loud we had it we couldn't hear our vocals worth $hite and i returned it after we realize no way it would cut it. Then got a newer peavey with dual amps like the carvin and same issue. Ended up selling that one for a loss due to no return policy.
What i think the reason was is that the old peaveys huge power tranny could handle loud transients while the 2 new mixers we tried had those light weight toroidal trannys that maybe can't handle transients near as well? We're a fairly loud classic rock band. So am i right about this and if so OR even if not, what spec or other thing should I look for in a mixer to compete with the old peavey's punchy defined vocals? By the way, the peavey and mixers we tried all were in the same general range of wattage.
What i think the reason was is that the old peaveys huge power tranny could handle loud transients while the 2 new mixers we tried had those light weight toroidal trannys that maybe can't handle transients near as well? We're a fairly loud classic rock band. So am i right about this and if so OR even if not, what spec or other thing should I look for in a mixer to compete with the old peavey's punchy defined vocals? By the way, the peavey and mixers we tried all were in the same general range of wattage.
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