169 and 961 are different animals. Both are extremely well built and designed, but the 961 incorporates patented techniques that makes it extremely transparent. Any, no "colour" to expect from a Studer mixer.Pfeifer said:Hey guys
Heva a chance to get a fully restored Studer 169 or 961. Wondering if theres any issues and how well they are built. I will be using it as a summing mixer for the most part. Any info would be great.
Thanks
Nick
abbey road d enfer said:I would think the second-hand prices reflect the difference at the time. The 961 was more expensive by a factor 4-5 IIRC.
Pfeifer said:Thanks. I'm going to pick up the 169. It's a 10x2. I've never used a Studer but have experience with various other consoles. I'm just hoping for it to help glue my mixed coming out the master bus. Hoping for a nice eq. I've never used a neve but my fav for workflow was an AWS 900. I really like the Trident consoles. Almost went with a Tof atb but I worry with build quality.
Thanks
Nick
hazel said:Glue comes from eq, compression and balance not by adding a console. When you nailed these three factors you can add a summimg mixer (or not).
If you want some knobs to tweak it's ok but don't expect a piece of gear to improve your mixing skills. It's the opposite.
Crappy mix goes into console? then crappy mix goes out of console
Aside from that: i use a Studer 963 16 channels and I can assure you it's completeley transparent
IIRC the 169 was a GP mixer used by many broadcast facilities for remote recording and radio games. Many of the smaller broadcast mixer manufacturers had closed shop and the market was not ready yet for the likes of Soundcraft, DR or Amek. The choice was very often between Studer and Neve.Pfeifer said:I've heard they were used for orchestral music.
That's correct; the typical broadcast applications use the standard features of the mixer. No partial mix (N-1) and no telco interface.zamproject said:Except fader start and input status signalling (which can be useful in studio recording too), the 169 don't have any broadcast specificity.
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