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StefanAumueller
9 months ago

Die Kollegen hier meinen mit USB, dass ein Audiointerface besser wäre. Diese gibt es auch in Mixern verbaut.

ultrarunner
9 months ago

If your "aux jack" is an output (which it probably is), then you can actually connect it to the LINE IN of a mixer.

Monster1965
9 months ago

As others have already written: If the aux jack is an aux out, then it should work. But a USB connection would be better.

But be careful! For this to work, you need the right cable. And by "fit," I don't mean "it fits into the jack"! Your PC will most likely have a 3.5mm stereo jack. Stereo means there are two signals: one for the left, one for the right.

Now it depends a bit on the mixer. But most people don't like having two signals on one jack. Therefore, you need a Y-cable that separates the two signals and feeds them into two different jacks, preferably from a stereo channel.

Monster1965
9 months ago
Reply to  Lennardx7V

Ja genau. Kanal 3/4 ist für so Sachen gedacht. Da ein Y-Kabel und damit in die beiden Buchen

Monster1965
9 months ago

Sure, you can plug in a 6.3mm plug—I mean the two jacks. But you'll need a Y-cable so you can plug into both jacks.

As explained above, the desk would like the left and right signals to be separate and not both on one socket.

koofenix
9 months ago

In principle, if it's an output, this is perfectly possible. However, a more elegant and better-quality option would be to connect the mixer via USB. Then you'd stay digital all the way to the mixer, bypassing the laptop's lousy converters.