Home 2023 Forums Digital DJ Gear pioneer ddj sx or ddj rr

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  • #2462761
    Rob S
    Participant

    I have a Mk1 SX (gonna sell it soon coincidentally!) and it’s a nice bit of kit.

    With those two options, it really comes down to whether you will get more use out of 4 channels + 2 mics or the fancy extras on the RR (DVS support, sequencer). I personally would choose the SX as the standalone mixer is more useful to me.

    #2462791
    Ian Williams
    Participant

    with the RR, you’re pretty much locked in to RekordBox (no serato support)

    That may or may not be a bad thing (depending on your point of view), but it’s something worth thinking about.

    #2462801
    Ian Williams
    Participant

    With the DDDJ-RR, you’re pretty much locked in to RekordBox (no serato support)

    That may or may not be a bad thing (depending on your point of view), but it’s something worth thinking about.

    I owned an RR for several weeks, but sold it on. Additional Reason’s being;

    1. Although it’s got line/turntable inputs, it’s not actually a standalone mixer. Those inputs are routed in to Rekord box. (or very limited standalone functionality “no EQ” if you flip a switch on the back of the controller)

    2. Same with the mic. It’s got 3 band EQ, but you need the software running to get it. (As above, will work with no EQ if you flip a switch)

    All of the above works fine, but i lost power one night (Sound limiter at venue kicking in) & found myself dead in the water with no music or mic till my software “found” the controller again. I could have got to the back of the controller to switch my mic directly to the output, but the switch is tiny, & the booth was dark.

    Back to an MC6000 now! ….a shame really, as The RR with Rekordbox is great fun to DJ with.

    #2462891
    Kg
    Participant

    If you love recordbox I’d and only need 2 channels I’d go for the RR. I just stated using the rx and the dedicated controls make using it easier. E.g I carry thousands of tracks that I never play but if someone asks for one and I need to beat grid it, with most tracks it takes seconds.

    The bar I work at also had cdj900 so I could use RB with those should the controller fail or if there’s not enough room in the booth which is one reason why I switched to recordbox.

    Either way you’ll get a good controller

    #2463111
    Mike N
    Participant

    Thanks guys for the feedback. Based on my needs, I have decided on the sx as it has a few more things that I need, 2 mic inputs as I am a mobile dj. It does work with rekordbox dj, that’s a bonus if I decide to use the software as well as serato and virtual dj.

    #2463151
    Ian Williams
    Participant

    I know your original post said “not SX2”, but if you can find the extra cash, i’d recommend that over the old SX.

    You’re a mobile jock & you want decent mic channels. …the early SX’s had issues with the mic channels & ideally need an addditional attenuator (15db or so) on your mic lead. This was fixed on the SX2

    Have a read through some of these links;

    https://www.google.co.uk/search?q=ddj+sx+mic+issue&oq=DDJ-sx+mic&aqs=chrome.2.69i57j0l5.5949j0j4&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8

    #2463221
    DJ Vintage
    Moderator

    Coming from an SX (not 2) and moving to the MCX8000, I am SOOOO glad that I have separate mic channels again. Sharing a mic channel with a fader input channel that you actually use is such a pain in mobile work. Having to reset gain and EQ before actually using the mic and riding the mic fader is not something I like to do.

    The Denon has two separate mic channels with individual EQ and a bit of echo and individual gains and an ON/OFF button. So you set it once and after that you just hit that on/off button and off you go.

    #2463471
    Mike N
    Participant

    Thanks Ian for the info on the mic issue. I do have a small 4 channel allen and heath Zed series mixer so I could connect the sx to this and use the mic inputs in it.

    Dj Vintage, saying that you had the sx for a while, how do they perform? apart from the mic issue is the sx a good controller in terms of spec and functionality? I definitely cannot afford the Denon mcx8000 but love to one day..

    #2463531
    Ian Williams
    Participant

    Yes you could go in to an external mixer, but it’s another pice of equipment that isn’t really necessary.

    Plugging one of these in would be easier!

    http://www.thatcable.com/product/XLR-In-Line-Balanced-Attenuator-Volume-Adapter-15dB?gclid=CjwKEAiAjIbBBRCitNvJ1o257WESJADpoUt0wQ7XIHM56FdzyQsbjKwePNVYj2u-DQxxE9uAg74rERoCqjPw_wcB

    #2463731
    DJ Vintage
    Moderator

    The SX performs fine. It’s a proper controller, the SX2 offering slightly more, but not enough imho to refuse looking at a good used SX and saving some money keeping your options for the future open.

    #2463921
    Rob S
    Participant

    x2 on the SX.

    Very well built. The mixer is great, same as a DJM in look and feel. Filter is good. EQs are what you’d expect.

    The jog wheels aren’t up to CDJ standards but they do the job well enough.

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