Looking for preamp advice: UA 8110.

Here's where to talk about preamps, cables, microphones, monitors, etc.

Moderator: James Steele

Forum rules
Here's where to talk about preamps, cables, microphones, monitors, etc.
gregwhartley
Posts: 257
Joined: Sat Jul 08, 2006 6:10 am
Primary DAW OS: MacOS
Location: Tampa, FL
Contact:

Looking for preamp advice: UA 8110.

Post by gregwhartley »

Hello all, I'm in need of this forum's combined vast intelligence and experience :D . Basically I'm in the planning stage of building a new console and rack furniture for my (soon-to-be) new home's studio. I've drawn up the sketches for the console and a couple of racks via Google sketchup (if you haven't used sketchup it's free and awesome). These "sketches" best describe my studio furniture visions and can be found here: http://gwhrecording.com/gsforum/yabb/At ... _Racks.jpg . Please keep in mind that the console is roughly to scale, but by no means exact.

The console will house one Mackie Control Surface w/ two extensions, a Presonus Central Station remote and mouse (placed in indent to right of mixer recess), (2) MOTU HD192 converters, Furman power conditioning for the whole mess, and 24 channels worth of preamps. I know it may sound like a lot to cram in, but the three tilted rack bays above the mixer are 6RU high each so it all works out nicely.

The rack with the glass door on it is for the Mac and other loud equipment/stuff that I won't be tweaking often. I'm planning on locating this rack somewhere near an air conditioning vent so I can run a "cooling line" to it.

The other rack is for compressors, various outboard preamps, 'verbs, patchbay, etc. and will probably be located alongside a wall to the left of the console or somewhere in between.

I plan on floating the floors in both the control room and live room with Auralex U-boats and multi-layering the walls with Auralex sheetblock, industrial sheetrock, and some industrial-grade noise reduction insulation I can get cheap from a friend. Of course the construction list goes on and on (separate power and ground from house, etc, etc...) but my real question today is:

What preamps should I arm my "console" with? To me, the most attractive choice is three Universal Audio 8110's. The thing I like most about these is that each pre can act differently depending on what you need it for. The three tone settings seem very intuitive to me ("off" for crystal clean, "vintage" for mild transformer loading, and "saturate" for transformer loading w/ light limiting). I also like the unit's ability for input impedance switching. I generally record everything, but the mainstays are blues, all varieties of rock, and metal, so the versatility of this unit would be a fantastic convenience. I could have the drum mic pre's in saturate mode for limiting and dial in some gain-induced crunchiness, the guitars in vintage with light gain, and vox in vintage with moderate gain. Of course I will have a couple of rogue pre's in my side rack for extra coloration or pristene preamplification, but I need several preamps in a "small" package for everyday moderate to high track count recordings.

Has anybody here used these units or their little brothers, the 4110 and Solo/110? If so, what were your impressions of these preamps and would you recommend them? Also, if anybody has any other recommendations for 8 channel pre's I'd love to hear them. Please keep in mind I'm not looking for completely pristene preamps (like the Grace 801, or True Precision 8 ), I'd rather have the ability to give the sound some character if I want it and not always be tied to the crisp sound (allthough I do want that option too :D).

Brad L., what are your opinions? (Also, do you know why the 8110 doesn't show up on Sweetwater's multichannel preamp category? I've got to search by manufacturer to find the piece. Kind of makes me think I'm missing out on some other good multi pre's.
:shock: )

Thanks in advance to all who read this and contribute their knowledge!
"We are all disgusting, doomed to our dirty little tasks. Eating and farting and scratching and smiling and celebrating holidays." -Bukowski
gregwhartley
Posts: 257
Joined: Sat Jul 08, 2006 6:10 am
Primary DAW OS: MacOS
Location: Tampa, FL
Contact:

Post by gregwhartley »

BTW, I'm only planning on purchasing two 8110's to start with. I'm just allowing myself some room for a third should it be needed (desired) in the future - otherwise I'll fill the extra space with a different type of preamp or some compressors (which I typically only use early in the signal chain for vox or really transient guitars).
"We are all disgusting, doomed to our dirty little tasks. Eating and farting and scratching and smiling and celebrating holidays." -Bukowski
User avatar
BradLyons
Posts: 2635
Joined: Sun Oct 24, 2004 10:01 pm
Primary DAW OS: Windows
Location: Atlanta, GA
Contact:

Post by BradLyons »

Okay, this is interesting trying to type while the cat is doing her darndest to get my attention. How many times can I push her away before she gets the hint???? LOL Sorry, I've been up since 5am and not awake yet---hmmmm not a good idea to be mixing then, huh? ;-)

Okay, well if you know me you know I know mics and pres and I'd like to think I know them well. There are so many choices and flavors to go with, depending on what you're after and the combination of mics you're going to use can have a drastic impact on what does what. You're going to have good converters it sounds like, so there is no problem with the pres doing their job here. So you want 24-channels of pre to cover a wide range of tone and musical spectrums?

Recently, I considered buying a 4110 for my studio but ultimately decided to go another direction for a few reasons, none of which are bad--just personal reasons. I have used it (the 8110 is the same) and it is VERY NICE, and quite versatile as you pointed out. This pre offers you (3)different sounds just by flipping a switch, is quiet as can be and has a lot of features--including a DI on each input. While the 8110 is pretty awesome, I wouldn't put all of your eggs into one basket so to speak because the great thing about the outboard gear available today are the various options and colors available.

Perhaps some combination of below would be good:

DRUMS
(2) Presonus ADL600's (2-channels each)...absolutely KILLER on KICK, SNARE and OVERHEADS

(1) Focusrite Red1....(4ch pre) which is gorgeous on Toms.
-or-
(2) Langevin Dual MicPre with EQ (2-ch each). This is a highly under-rated mic pre that, like the Red, has a warm tone while being solid-state. It has a Low and Hi EQ filter that is great for making small adjustments. I'm in the middle of transitioning to a pair of these boxes myself.

(1) Apogee MINIMP for Hi Hat and Ride or something else you want a clean signal. THIS THING ROCKS, but few are familiar with it. It's not expensive, either.

======
GUITARS

The ADL600's work wonderfully on an acoustic guitar, very lush and warm while the highs come right through. I love this pre! But combined with a Royer on guitar cabinet, it shines just as well. The DI is also pretty killer and sounds awesome on Bass Guitar, my go-to everytime. Another option is the Summit TPA200B, it's a little darker but given the ability to drive the input or the output, or both, separately allows you to drive the tubes or back-off and get a more neutral sound, with warmth. In other words, you can saturate the crap out of your signal or make it fairly neutral. It's a fairly expensive pre, around $2700. I own one, love it! A great option dedicated for electric or bass would also include the Universal Audio LA610, lush tone...good tracking limiter.

If you're after more neutral sound, this is where the 8110 would certainly be a great option because, depending on mics, you can radically alter the sound shaping possibilitie you're after. Also for neutrallity without spending a lot of money, back to that Apogee MiniMP. If you really want some clean gain for guitars, GML!!!! There are a few flavors there, depending on channels you desire.

=====
VOCALS
Take your pick, but I'm a firm believer in one good channel strip for this and combine that with the right microphone. My personal favorite is a Soundelux U99 or the E49. Because of this, I like a solid-state pre--my choice is the Focusrite Liquid Channel--but this is where a GML pre is killer. On the affordable side, the Universal Audio LA610 would be a good option here but not with a tube mic IMHO.

As to the multi-channel pres..... obviously the 4110 and 8110 is very good as is the Grace 801. The True Systems P8 gets a lot of good marks and well deserving, but one particular pre that gets over-looked often is the PRE by Digidesign. Many think this is a ProTools only option, it's not. Honestly, this thing is good. REALLY good! Those that use it are quite surprised, as was I when I first tried it. One of these days I'll buy one, I'm just not really into clean-gain though....thus why I've not bought one. If you go to my website and click on the Studio Section, you'll see my rack of pres and that I like WARMTH! :-)

Other good pres to have around include:

A-Designs Pacifica--I'm not sure, but this really makes me think of API. I'm not a big API fan which explains why I'm not totally inlove with this box, but I do like it. My clients rave over it, so I guess it's good!

Not out yet, but the new SUPRE coming from GrooveTubes is pretty amazing for the money. I believe it's going to be about $1500-ish for a 2-ch tube pre that has some %@%^^. One of the BEST values money can buy is the Focusrite ISA428, this thing always performs. It is neutral, but some coloration--not too much, not too sterile either. It has a nice rounded, analog sound and when adding the A/D option it makes a pretty high quality 8-ch A/D. Of course with a pair of HD192's, not an issue. A pre I picked up just for the heck of it turned out to be a pretty big surprise indeed....the MP20 from Presonus. For $500, this thing is quite nice actually! Very clean and quiet, even with my Earthworks.

Great River makes some unique boxes based on the classic Neve sound, but with a twist. These work well on just about anything, good to have around. I've thought about buying their single channel pre, but I want a full-rack space.....not a half rack. I know, stupid reason but hey. Whatever you do, GET these mics:

A pair of Earthworks TC30's, beautiful on drum overheads and make great mics for acoustic guitars, strings, piano and choirs. At least one Royer R121 or R122 for guitar cabinets, a must. Mojave MA200, one of the best $1k mics you could ever own.....I've used this on everything just about....pairs on drum overheads and in a piano, kick drum, electric guitar cabinet, vocals, acoustic guitar, B3 organ (Leslie), Percussion, etc. AKG C451B's, highly versatile and great for close-miking Hi Hat or Ride, acoustic guitar, etc.

Just a few thoughts...
Thank you,
Brad Lyons
db AUDIO & VIDEO
-Systems Advisor, CTS
zara_drummer
Posts: 139
Joined: Sun Apr 30, 2006 1:53 am
Primary DAW OS: MacOS
Location: AZ
Contact:

Post by zara_drummer »

I recently purchase the Focusrite Voicemaster Pro...The new one. For less than $700 I have a really nice and very very flexible vocal chain.

Overall I've been very impressed with the unit, its got a class A pre and its soo so quiet even with my MXL2001. Its got an Expander, Compressor, EQ De-Esser, "tube" emulation, and my fav the Vintage Harmonics.

My favorite features have been the compressor and the Harmonics portion. I'm not big into Tube emulation, but it does add a nice effect to a vocal if your looking for that.

The routing is decent, its got an output for pre and post De-esser and a typical line out. Plus you can route your monitors thru it. If you have a smaller set up l do than its a great feature.

Just my 2 cents on a nice all-in-one pre.

Good luck!
gregwhartley
Posts: 257
Joined: Sat Jul 08, 2006 6:10 am
Primary DAW OS: MacOS
Location: Tampa, FL
Contact:

Post by gregwhartley »

Wow! Thanks guys! I was actually planning on picking up a Royer 121 (possibly a pair), but I wanted to compare them with another ribbon mic that I can't recall the name of right now (it's not an AEA, rather, it's hand made by two transducer engineers). I severely love the sound of the 121's and must have at least one in any case.

I considered the Digi pre but I prefer to have easily accessible knobs to grapple my mits around - I don't want to have to toggle between channels with buttons and such other digital controllery. Thanks for all the recommendations on outboard preamps though! I plan on picking up an ADL600 eventually, as I'm a huge Presonus fan. Also I'd like to hear a Great River pre since I've heard nothing but great things about it. A UA 2-610 is also a definite on my outboard list.

From the way you described all the other mulit-channel pre's it sounds like they're all quite capable of the task at hand. I'm thinking I'm going to go with the 8110's though - I really like the large size of it and accessible simplicity of it's features. Most importantly is the versatility part of it all, as that is what I'll need the most. However, I think I'll pick up only 2 8110's and get a few other outboard pre's and vocal strips to start with, and then pick up another 8110 if I really need it.

Has anybody checked out the furniture I'm building yet? I'm quite proud of the design and am open for input.

Thanks again for all the suggestions so far! Anybody else with more?
"We are all disgusting, doomed to our dirty little tasks. Eating and farting and scratching and smiling and celebrating holidays." -Bukowski
Resonant Alien
Posts: 1374
Joined: Wed Nov 10, 2004 10:01 pm
Primary DAW OS: Unspecified

Post by Resonant Alien »

Look at the Shadow Hills GAMA. 8 channels, switchable transformers and about the same price as an 8110. Vintage King carries them. Gives you similar flexibility.

Also, consider an API Lunchbox setup and get a variety of pre modules to go in. There are a lot of choices for pres and it is a cost-effective way to expand.

Also, if you want a lot of additional opinions, check out the Gearslutz forum.
...
gregwhartley
Posts: 257
Joined: Sat Jul 08, 2006 6:10 am
Primary DAW OS: MacOS
Location: Tampa, FL
Contact:

Post by gregwhartley »

Resonant Alien wrote:Look at the Shadow Hills GAMA. 8 channels, switchable transformers and about the same price as an 8110. Vintage King carries them. Gives you similar flexibility.

Also, consider an API Lunchbox setup and get a variety of pre modules to go in. There are a lot of choices for pres and it is a cost-effective way to expand.

Also, if you want a lot of additional opinions, check out the Gearslutz forum.
Oooooh, some very attractive options. Thanks RA!
"We are all disgusting, doomed to our dirty little tasks. Eating and farting and scratching and smiling and celebrating holidays." -Bukowski
jnunally
Posts: 62
Joined: Sat Nov 27, 2004 10:01 pm
Primary DAW OS: MacOS
Location: California

Re: Looking for preamp advice: UA 8110.

Post by jnunally »

gregwhartley wrote:Hello all, I'm in need of this forum's combined vast intelligence and experience :D . Basically I'm in the planning stage of building a new console and rack furniture for my (soon-to-be) new home's studio. I've drawn up the sketches for the console and a couple of racks via Google sketchup (if you haven't used sketchup it's free and awesome). These "sketches" best describe my studio furniture visions and can be found here: http://gwhrecording.com/gsforum/yabb/At ... _Racks.jpg . Please keep in mind that the console is roughly to scale, but by no means exact.

The console will house one Mackie Control Surface w/ two extensions, a Presonus Central Station remote and mouse (placed in indent to right of mixer recess), (2) MOTU HD192 converters, Furman power conditioning for the whole mess, and 24 channels worth of preamps. I know it may sound like a lot to cram in, but the three tilted rack bays above the mixer are 6RU high each so it all works out nicely.

The rack with the glass door on it is for the Mac and other loud equipment/stuff that I won't be tweaking often. I'm planning on locating this rack somewhere near an air conditioning vent so I can run a "cooling line" to it.

The other rack is for compressors, various outboard preamps, 'verbs, patchbay, etc. and will probably be located alongside a wall to the left of the console or somewhere in between.

I plan on floating the floors in both the control room and live room with Auralex U-boats and multi-layering the walls with Auralex sheetblock, industrial sheetrock, and some industrial-grade noise reduction insulation I can get cheap from a friend. Of course the construction list goes on and on (separate power and ground from house, etc, etc...) but my real question today is:

What preamps should I arm my "console" with? To me, the most attractive choice is three Universal Audio 8110's. The thing I like most about these is that each pre can act differently depending on what you need it for. The three tone settings seem very intuitive to me ("off" for crystal clean, "vintage" for mild transformer loading, and "saturate" for transformer loading w/ light limiting). I also like the unit's ability for input impedance switching. I generally record everything, but the mainstays are blues, all varieties of rock, and metal, so the versatility of this unit would be a fantastic convenience. I could have the drum mic pre's in saturate mode for limiting and dial in some gain-induced crunchiness, the guitars in vintage with light gain, and vox in vintage with moderate gain. Of course I will have a couple of rogue pre's in my side rack for extra coloration or pristene preamplification, but I need several preamps in a "small" package for everyday moderate to high track count recordings.

Has anybody here used these units or their little brothers, the 4110 and Solo/110? If so, what were your impressions of these preamps and would you recommend them? Also, if anybody has any other recommendations for 8 channel pre's I'd love to hear them. Please keep in mind I'm not looking for completely pristene preamps (like the Grace 801, or True Precision 8 ), I'd rather have the ability to give the sound some character if I want it and not always be tied to the crisp sound (allthough I do want that option too :D).

Brad L., what are your opinions? (Also, do you know why the 8110 doesn't show up on Sweetwater's multichannel preamp category? I've got to search by manufacturer to find the piece. Kind of makes me think I'm missing out on some other good multi pre's.
:shock: )

Thanks in advance to all who read this and contribute their knowledge!
I have worked in many different studios with many different preamp setups over the years. I used one UA product recently, the UA6170, at least I think that is the number. It is a nice unit, I like the sound of the pre and the compressor. I must mention a 4 micpre unit called the Sytek MPX-4a. I have 8 channels of them and they sound really great, very smooth, they tend to add a little color but I find they work really well with condenser microphones and I like the mute switches, they are very handy.

One thing I think is really important in setting up a studio is having choices of sounds. The nice part about the home studio setups nowdays is that many folks are using a few different micpres in their setup. I have a rack with 6 different manufactures; Forrsell Technologies CS-1 and Fetcode (these are awesome pres), Millennia Media, Peavey VMP 2, Sytek, Aphex. I use the Sytek with Neumann KM-184 most of the time on my guitar. I love the way the Peavey VMP 2 sounds with a Neuman TLM 103 or Shure KSM32 on the banjo, or with a Coles 4033 ribbon on the fiddle. I really like the Forrsell Tech and a KM-184 on the acoustic bass. I find the Millennia Media is a very clean pre and I use it when I want a very accurate uncolored sound, but it has a very punchy low end. As far as a lush sound I really dig the Forrsell Technology Fetcode, everything you run through that preamp sounds great, especially vocals.

I think getting one particular preamp setup is a bit limiting. It is really nice to have a few different choices and learn the sounds of them and figure out which combination of micrphone and preamp works best on what instrument.

Good luck in your search,
Jim
User avatar
daniel.sneed
Posts: 2264
Joined: Sun Jan 23, 2005 10:01 pm
Primary DAW OS: MacOS
Location: France
Contact:

Post by daniel.sneed »

Some more 2 cents, Greg :

I'm very pleased with the TC Electronic Gold Channel.

2 channels of pristine gain, even with ribbon mics, and a bunch of digital things, eq, dynamics, etc... to bring that where you like it !
You can even turn those 2 channels into a single "superchannel" for extreme and extensive treatments.

Then you can save your favorite settings in 100 user memories.
The factory presets have been useless for me till now.

Many wonders in a trustfull single rackspace.
dAn Shakin' all over! :unicorn:
DP11.34, OS12.7.6, MacBookPro-i7
Falcon, Kontakt, Ozone, RX, Unisum, Michelangelo, Sparkverb
Waldorf Iridium & STVC & Blofeld, Kemper Profiler Stage, EWIusb, Mixface
JBL4326+4312sub, Behringer X32rack
Many mandolins, banjos, guitars, flutes, melodions, xylos, kalimbas...
OldTimey
Posts: 862
Joined: Sat Feb 05, 2005 10:01 pm
Primary DAW OS: MacOS

Post by OldTimey »

I wouldn't paint myself in a corner with 2-3 8110's. Sure they have switches that change the sound a bit, but I'd consider, as Brad mentioned, some kind of tube preamp to go along with all the solid state stuff....

also, if you like "colored" pres, Chandler Germanium is an amazing bargain. Great River, also a nice colored pre that is amazingly versatile. As brad mentioned..AD Pacifica...I love this thing, but I like the sound of API...so!

I guess the 8110 is attractive cause it packs so much in such a little rack space, but you could always get an API 500 series box and stuff it full of different modules from different manufacturers.

Hey if you didn't want to hear opinions on it you wouldn't have posted here. I wouldn't buy 3 let alone 2 UA8110 without considering other pres...
User avatar
James Steele
Site Administrator
Posts: 22792
Joined: Fri Oct 15, 2004 10:01 pm
Primary DAW OS: MacOS
Location: San Diego, CA - U.S.A.
Contact:

Post by James Steele »

Speaking of non-colored pres... and not that I'm necessarily suggesting it here, but Brad, what's your take on Millennia? I bought an HV-3C and have been having good results with it on a wide variety of stuff. Granted I don't have the budget to try a lot of pres, so this is sort of my do-all mic pre for now.
JamesSteeleProject.com | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter

Mac Studio M1 Max, 64GB/2TB, macOS Sequoia 15.5 Public Beta 2, DP 11.34, MOTU 828es, MOTU 24Ai, MOTU MIDI Express XT, UAD-2 TB3 Satellite OCTO, Console 1 Mk2, Avid S3, NI Komplete Kontrol S88 Mk2, Red Type B, Millennia HV-3C, Warm Audio WA-2A, AudioScape 76F, Dean guitars, Marshall amps, etc., etc.!
User avatar
BradLyons
Posts: 2635
Joined: Sun Oct 24, 2004 10:01 pm
Primary DAW OS: Windows
Location: Atlanta, GA
Contact:

Post by BradLyons »

James,

The HV3C is a KILLER mic-pre and one that is a standard when it comes to clean gain. It's not one I'd use for anything heavy such as miking guitar cabs or using on drums, but for things like vocals or acoustic guitar it can sound MAWVUHLOUS to say the least.
Thank you,
Brad Lyons
db AUDIO & VIDEO
-Systems Advisor, CTS
User avatar
James Steele
Site Administrator
Posts: 22792
Joined: Fri Oct 15, 2004 10:01 pm
Primary DAW OS: MacOS
Location: San Diego, CA - U.S.A.
Contact:

Post by James Steele »

Yeah, I'm using it on vocals with a Red Type B which I'm a big fan of. I am also using it on guitar cabs, because... well, it's what I have. But I've had good results. There's a link to an MP3 of a recording of my Marshall amp which I made using the HV3C, and Groove Tubes GT-66 mic into a MOTU HD192. I was just noodling around to make a short snippet to demo the sound. The MP3 I believe is at 256kbps

http://www.motunation.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=18252

I've gotten a lot of favorable comments about the results. Interestingly, it was recorded with a Sennheiser wireless on the guitar. (I had dialed in my life rig over 2 years of playing clubs and frankly, that wireless had become an integral part of the sound I liked and was used to.) Go figure.
JamesSteeleProject.com | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter

Mac Studio M1 Max, 64GB/2TB, macOS Sequoia 15.5 Public Beta 2, DP 11.34, MOTU 828es, MOTU 24Ai, MOTU MIDI Express XT, UAD-2 TB3 Satellite OCTO, Console 1 Mk2, Avid S3, NI Komplete Kontrol S88 Mk2, Red Type B, Millennia HV-3C, Warm Audio WA-2A, AudioScape 76F, Dean guitars, Marshall amps, etc., etc.!
OldTimey
Posts: 862
Joined: Sat Feb 05, 2005 10:01 pm
Primary DAW OS: MacOS

Post by OldTimey »

James Steele wrote:Yeah, I'm using it on vocals with a Red Type B which I'm a big fan of. I am also using it on guitar cabs, because... well, it's what I have. But I've had good results. There's a link to an MP3 of a recording of my Marshall amp which I made using the HV3C, and Groove Tubes GT-66 mic into a MOTU HD192. I was just noodling around to make a short snippet to demo the sound. The MP3 I believe is at 256kbps

http://www.motunation.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=18252

I've gotten a lot of favorable comments about the results. Interestingly, it was recorded with a Sennheiser wireless on the guitar. (I had dialed in my life rig over 2 years of playing clubs and frankly, that wireless had become an integral part of the sound I liked and was used to.) Go figure.
James,

i almost feel that with the style of electric guitar that you play, where the tone coming out of the amp is so important, and how well defined each and every note is (despite it being so cranked!) that an uncolored pre like the HV-3C would work quite well. A colored pre would really impart a different tone on things, maybe in a good way, but maybe it would drive you nuts...
User avatar
James Steele
Site Administrator
Posts: 22792
Joined: Fri Oct 15, 2004 10:01 pm
Primary DAW OS: MacOS
Location: San Diego, CA - U.S.A.
Contact:

Post by James Steele »

Well you know, so much of this is all subjective as we've said a million times before and if you like it... you like it. :-) What you're saying makes sense to me in that if I really want the sound coming from the amp just as it is, a clean pre with lots of headroom is probably a good thing. I bought it because I really liked tracks that Jim Watson did for me and he used that pre as well.

Yeah, the style I play doesn't really want added distortion. Honestly, I have found that, in terms of a good rock/metal guitar sound in the context of a mix, I have the pre-amp in my amplifier backed off to the point that a lot of people would say "how can you play like that" because there is NOT a lot of gain in the signal. More gain in the preamp = less clarity and punch. Playing on the edge of what you'd think is "not enough" yields a sound I really like, but the downside is that if you clam, there's absolutely no mistaking it. There's no wiggle room if you don't play cleanly.
JamesSteeleProject.com | Facebook | Instagram | Twitter

Mac Studio M1 Max, 64GB/2TB, macOS Sequoia 15.5 Public Beta 2, DP 11.34, MOTU 828es, MOTU 24Ai, MOTU MIDI Express XT, UAD-2 TB3 Satellite OCTO, Console 1 Mk2, Avid S3, NI Komplete Kontrol S88 Mk2, Red Type B, Millennia HV-3C, Warm Audio WA-2A, AudioScape 76F, Dean guitars, Marshall amps, etc., etc.!
Post Reply