Mackie ProFX16v3 Professional USB Mixer, 16-Channel

THE workhorse compact mixer! Mackie's 3rd-gen ProFX16 gives you 11 Onyx mic preamps, one-knob compressors on 8 channels, 2x4 USB I/O and 24 built-in effects!

$549.99

  • 8 x  
    $68.75
  • No Credit Check
    6 x  
    $91.66
  • No Credit Check
    4 x  
    $137.50

Mackie Onyx 1640i 16-Channel Premium Analog Mixer with FireWire Interface

No longer available at zZounds
Record with 16 Onyx mic preamps -- then mix on real faders, with true analog summing. The Onyx 1640i has a built-in 16-in/16-out FireWire interface.

When it comes to analog mixers, the Mackie Onyx 1640i is a seriously powerful, flexible choice. Yes, it's got 16 Onyx mic preamps and top-quality converters for your front end. But it's also got a 16-in/16-out FireWire interface and smooth 60mm faders ready to mix 16 DAW tracks in the analog world. Integrating seamlessly with both "ends" of your DAW, the Onyx 1640i mixer is an ideal analog mixer for your home studio. To top it off, this mixer is designed with legendary Mackie build quality. And if you're setting up to record live shows right off the console, the 1640i can't go wrong.

This video from Mackie explains the power of the Onyx-i series:


A Full-Fledged Analog Mixer

Even if it didn't have a built-in 16x16 FireWire interface, the 1640i would still be an awesome analog mixer. For starters, it's a Mackie -- a company known for tank-like build quality. Mackie boards have long been indispensable in can't-fail environments like broadcast studios, live venues, and mobile recording rigs. Plus, the Onyx name means you're getting Mackie's flagship mic preamps -- 16 of them, in this case. Onyx mic pres are designed for accuracy, transparency, and detail -- no matter what kind of mic, instrument, or line-level source you're plugging in. And then there's the Perkins EQ on each channel, named for the veteran engineer that developed these "British-style," natural-sounding filters to sweeten any source. The 4-band, sweepable-mid EQ section has a true hardware bypass, of course. read more And because the 1640i is a full-fledged analog mixer, it's an excellent real-time monitoring solution: just use its six aux sends to build headphone mixes in the analog domain with zero latency, regardless of what is going on in your DAW.

Capture 16 Channels With Flexible Routing

The Onyx 1640i really starts working its magic when you plug in a FireWire cable. Your 16 channels sail through high-end Cirrus A/D converters and into your DAW at up to 24-bit, 96 kHz resolution. Because it's a 16-in/16-out FireWire interface, you can capture 16 simultaneous channels -- or, choose to capture 4 channels along with your 4 mono subgroups, 6 aux sends, and stereo mix. It's all about routing flexibility with the 1640i. Each channel on the 1640i has a pre/post button, so you can record your tracks with or without the Perkins EQ and inserts applied. For example, if your bassist needs lots of low-end punch in his headphones during tracking, you can kick on his EQ, but press the "pre" button so only the clean, un-EQ'd signal is sent out through FireWire and into your DAW. Or you can insert your trusty hardware reverb for the vocalist's headphones, but still record the vocal track "clean." However you set up the routing, FireWire is fully integrated into the Onyx 1640i -- making external interfaces or converters completely unnecessary.

Plays Nice With Outboard Gear -- Or Plug-ins

Got outboard gear? With 1/4-inch insert plugs on every channel and on the master stereo bus, you can easily insert your favorite hardware compressor on the 1640i. And with six aux sends, there's plenty of room to patch in your hardware reverbs and return them to the four stereo channels. Now, if you're of more of a plug-ins processing person, that's where the 1640i's FireWire integration comes in handy. Let's say you're overdubbing vocals through the 1640i into Pro Tools, and you want to add reverb from a plug-in. Just call up the reverb plug-in on a Pro Tools aux channel, and assign its output to, say, FireWire channel 2. Then just press the FireWire button on the 1640i's channel 2, and there's your reverb. Now you can balance and EQ the "dry" channel with the "wet" channel, right on the 1640i's faders. Want to print that reverb sound back to Pro Tools on a separate track, while you capture the vocal dry? Just assign channel 2 to a subgroup by itself, and press the "subs to FireWire" button. That's the flexibility you get when you use well-thought-out hardware like the Mackie Onyx 1640i.

16 Channels of Real Analog Summing for your Studio

You may have heard a lot about digital recording setups with an "analog front end." Indeed, it's important to run your signal through great mic preamps and converters on the way into your DAW. But don't forget about the analog "back end": the process of sending individual channels back out of your DAW to an analog console, to be mixed on real faders, using real EQs, through a real analog summing bus. While many home studios invest in the front end, they forget about the back end. That's where the Mackie Onyx 1640i comes in. After you've recorded your session and done any in-the-box editing and processing, you can send up to 16 channels back to the 1640i to mix and tweak with its smooth 60mm faders and musical EQ. Because this board has a 16-in/16-out FireWire interface, you may choose to capture each channel back into your computer individually, post-fader -- with the EQ and mix level applied. It's like using the 1604i as a hardware insert for your DAW: push your tracks through the fat Perkins EQs and saturate them with analog warmth, then send the discrete tracks right back to your hard drive. Even better, you can take advantage of the Onyx's high-quality analog summing bus, and capture the 1604i's stereo mix (and your six aux sends and four subgroups, too) back into your DAW. That's a true tape-style mixdown -- and it's what the professional analog-meets-digital studio is all about.

Ideal For Live Shows, Too

Because it's so perfect for integrating with DAW software, people think of the Mackie Onyx 1640i as the heart of a home recording setup. But the 1640i is equally capable as the brain of a live PA. If you run sound at a venue, and you want to record shows digitally to a laptop, the 1640i lets you capture up to 16 tracks individually -- completely independently of the house mix. And with six aux sends with pre/post-fade switches, you've got six flexible stage-monitor sends. There's an input for an external talkback mic (since live shows are bound to be too noisy for using the 1640i's built-in talkback mic), and a BNC connector for a gooseneck lamp in dark venues. Plus, you can fatten up those live vocals with smooth Perkins EQ (just engage the low-cut on each channel, so you don't blow your subwoofers every time the vocalist utters the letter "P.") The 1640i is even perfect for playing music between bands: hit the "Assign to Main Mix" button to play a playlist from your FireWire-connected computer.

Check out our overview of the Mackie Onyx 1640i Analog Mixer:


Features:

-16 Onyx mic preamps with individual phantom power
- Hi-Z instrument inputs on channels 1 and 2
- Musical, 4-band Perkins EQ section on each channel
- Integrated 16-in/16-out FireWire interface at up to 96 kHz/24-bit resolution
- Real analog summing for your DAW
- Flexible FireWire routing: 6 auxes, 4 subgroups, or all channels
- Built-in talkback mic plus external talkbalk mic jack
- Tough Mackie build quality throughout
- Includes free download of Tracktion software

Why invest in a premium analog mixer like the Mackie 1640i for your home studio? Pro studios use DAWs to record and edit music, just like the typical home studio. So what makes pro studios sound so "pro"? Often, it's the analog mixer -- on the front and back end of their digital system. Try this mixer and hear what true analog summing can do for your signal path.
read less

Minimum System Requirements For General Use
FOR PC
- Microsoft Windows 7 32 / 64 RTM, Vista 32 / 64 RTM or XP 32 SP 2
- Pentium 4, Celeron or Athlon XP processor
- 512 MB RAM

FOR MAC
- Mac OS X 10.4.11 - 10.6.2
- G4 processor
- 512 MB RAM

Minimum System Requirements For Pro Tools M-Powered 8 Use
FOR PC
- Microsoft Windows Vista 32 SP2 or XP 32 SP 3
- 1GB RAM

FOR MAC
- Mac OS X 10.5.5 - 10.5.8
- 1GB RAM

The following computer systems have been qualified by the Mackie test department for use with all major DAW's including pro tools m-powered 8. This list does not represent the only systems that will function faultlessly and is intended to be a guide, however we cannot guarantee or support problem free system setup outside of these qualified systems.

For PC:
- HPCP7700P
- Chipset Q963
- Intel Core 2 Duo E6400 @ 2.13GHz
- 2GB RAM
- Ultra ULT40109 8 port FireWire / USB 2.0 card (VIA chipset)

FOR MAC:
- 8-core 3GHz
- Mac Pro (first generation, second revision)
- 4GB RAM
- MFG date April 2007 Power Mac G5

PowerMac (third generation, 7th revision):
- 2x 2.3 GHz

Using your Onyx-i Series Mixer with any other major DAW?
Onyx-i Series mixers are compatible with all major DAWs. This list includes (but is not limited to):

- Logic(r)
- Sonar(tm)
- Cubase(r)
- Ableton(r) Live
- Final Cut Pro(r)
- Tracktion(tm)
- Digital Performer(tm)

Register your Onyx-i mixer with Mackie and you will be given Instructions for the Mackie Universal Driver and Mackie Authorization Application that unlocks your mixer for use with Pro Tools M-Powered 8. The driver purchase allows your registered mixer to work with as many supported computers running Pro Tools M-Powered 8 as you have access to.

Our 30-Day 100% Satisfaction Guarantee applies to the Mackie Onyx Mixer. Buy it, and if it isn't just right for you, return it!

M-Audio Pro Tools M-Powered Recording Software cannot be returned once opened due to copyright law.

For support or warranty questions, please contact the manufacturer:
Phone: 800-898-3211
Email: support@mackie.com
Web: https://mackie.com/en/support/contact

Mackie Onyx 1640i 16-Channel Mixer

The 16-channel Mackie Onyx 1640i FireWire Recording Mixer combines the benefits of an extremely powerful computer interface with the tactile, hands-on control of a sleek premium analog mixer. Proven, professional features like 16 Onyx mic preamps and classic Perkins EQ provide unmatched sonic performance.

The 1640i allows you to send channels, aux sends, groups or master L/R signals discretely to your Mac or PC for recording. You can even return all 16 channels back to the mixer for a truly professional mixdown. Compatible out of the box with most major DAWs, and qualified for use with Pro Tools(r) M-Powered(tm) 8 via downloadable driver upgrade at Mackie's website.* See Note below.

Features

- 16-channel premium analog mixer with integrated 24-bit/96kHz FireWire I/O
- Qualified by Mackie for use will all major DAWs, including:
-- Logic(r)
-- Sonar(tm)
-- Cubase(r)
-- Ableton(r) Live
-- Final Cut Pro(r)
-- Pro Tools M-Powered 8 (Requires $49.99 USD driver upgrade at www.mackie.com)
- Includes free download of Tracktion software
- 16 Onyx boutique quality microphone preamps
- 4-band Perkins EQ with sweepable mids on all channels
- Full 16x16 FireWire channel streaming for ultimate DAW integration
- Flexible FireWire routing including aux sends, groups and pre/post EQ assignment for all channels
- 6 aux sends with pre/post assignment and solo
- Smooth 60mm channel and master faders
- Built-in DI on first two channels for direct connection of guitars, basses, etc.
- Individual 48 volt phantom power switches on all microphone inputs
- 4-segment metering on every channel
- 4-bus architecture for flexible sub-grouping of channels
- Talkback section for use with internal or external microphone
- Planet-Earth switching power supply for worldwide use
- Rotating I/O pod for desktop or rackmount operation - rack ears included

Recording and Mixing

Send all channels, aux sends or the master L/R straight to your computer for recording. Pre/post EQ taps on every channel allow you to integrate the renowned Perkins EQ into the record path. Plus, returns from your DAW are assignable to the control room section or straight back into a channel for mix integration.

Powerful Effects Engine

With all aux sends routable to your DAW, Onyx-i allows you to use your favorite plug-in as a realtime effect. Just route an aux send to your DAW, apply the plug-in and assign your DAW outputs to the control room or to a channel strip for instant integration into the mix.

Live Recording

Live sound recording could not be simpler with Onyx-i. The ability to record individual channels either wet or dry allows for studio quality multitrack recordings for later editing and mixdown. Or simply record the main mix, allowing for immediate creation of CDs right at the gig.

Reviewers gave this product an overall rating of 4.5 out of 5 stars. (15 ratings)
Submitted February 6, 2010 by a customer from hotmail.com

"if you can afford it, get one. but pass on the lower i-series units... theyre great but the 1640i is a joy to use and more versa"

Overall: 4.5 out of 5 stars
(see rating details)
This review has been selected by our experts as particularly helpful.
this unit should keep me happy for a couple of years until mackie tempt me with something else. luckily the resale value on a mackie is still pretty good, being a well respected company, so my upgrades arent too problematic. most home reviewers only ever report a really good or a really bad experience with a product they have just purchased... but for me, it's made my home studio fun again with its ease of use, solid drivers, decent sound quality and flawless pc to 1640i analog mixdown capabilities. they got it (almost) right this time. thanks again mackie!

Sound
very interesting sound out of this unit, i compared it directly to a yamaha n12, m-audio 192 (profire converters) and e-mu 1212m (protools hd converters). the yamaha and e-mu sound very similar (a lot of people rave about these converters, to me they're a little harsh and clinical for my taste)- the m-audio sounds extremely smooth, has great extended frequency response with buckets of headroom which i really prefer. the mackie 1640i converter's sit directly between the yamaha/e-mu and the m-audio. this is very pleasing to my ears! the eq and preamps are the same as their other onyx products (if it aint broke don't fix it) however the circutry, headroom and noisefloor are a little better than previous units. ssl (which i have used and love) can compare to this unit, its squekey clean! its actually cleaner than the digital yamaha n12- surprisingly the mackie 1640i is mostly analog and less read more noisey... how is that possible? a very solid 9/10 for the mackie. the only reason it doesnt get a 10/10 is that while this unit is fantastic on many levels it still aint a neve or ssl. but- it's damn close for a lot less money. home studio owners will be thrilled.

Features
this is where things get a little hairy, no spdif/adat inputs? no wordclock? no midi? no monitor select buttons (the yamaha n12 has 3!)? and why do most of these damn mixers have to have the on/off switch at the back of the unit (that goes for most monitors as well)??? i can understand the reasoning behind having no wordclock, the quality of affordable converters these days are exceptional anyway. 5 years ago i would as said no. but, it would have been nice. i like to use my ssl alpha channel for a big pop vocal sound and like to use its spdif capabilities- rather than hooking it up analog (don't try and tell me it doesn't make a difference to the sound, it does my friend). i've gotten around this by having my maudio 192 card installed as well. a little tricky, but it works with no conflicts! solved the midi problem too. by purchasing a tc electronic level pilot i can no also use two sets of monitors efficiently. i think mackie may have jumped the gun a little and thought most people would be buying this product for 'live' recording use, however many would want this for the studio. i would have happily paid a little more for the extra features- but like i said, people can get around it by installing a soundcard of their choice, for example.

Ease of Use
considering these are early drivers (mackie don't outsource their driver team/echo product manufacturing anymore - which is great- it's all in house now!) i'm amazed it works perfectly. the installation was painless, and i have used it in sonar, cubase, wavelab and traktion in windows 7 pro64 with no problems whatsoever! that's pretty impressive with such early drivers. i havent used it in protools, but i can't see why it wouldnt be flawless. latency has been decent so far and should get even better with more updates. keep in mind ive built a decent new i5 pc with 12gig of ram and intel mobo so dont expect this kind of operation on something you havent got off your ass to upgrade recently. you really should upgrade a pc every couple of years guys- its not hard to do and it aint that expensive. you can quietly smirk when your friends rave about their 'powerful' style over substance- and very expensive macs. losers. and this is from a guy that always used macs up to about 6 years ago... the change was the best thing i ever did (just don't be stupid and get another pc for your internet surfing).

Quality
the quality is what you have come to expect from mackie. they've always made decent gear, even now that theyve been bought out and their manufacturing is done in china. the knobs are a little wobbly these days though (but nothing to be concerned about). as far as the new design, i like it but preffered the look of the previous onyx series. the preamps, eq and recording quality... you wont buy better in this price range (unless you buy a neve or ssl as i've already mentioned). i've also started mixing out of the box again with 2 behringer v-verb rev2496's, ensoniq dp4, neumann tlm103 mic and various fmr compressors with amazing results! i've worked in some high end studio's before and it's amazing what you can do these days at home with not much outlay. the computer to 1640i analog fw 'record to tape' style mixdown has also been problem free, and if you know what you're doing, you will get a pro, punchy, sweet sound for your tracks. sounds better than a digital mixdown (to my ears at least).

Value
for the money theres a few comparable products out there (yamaha n12 for example), but... i like the mackie more. and it sounds better too. it will be very interesting to see what they release next!

Manufacturer Support
havent needed it at all so far, even after almost 2 months of constant use.

The Wow Factor
as i said before i prefer the look of the previous onyx mixers, but... damned if i don't wanna carress this thing now and again.

Musical Background:
engineer/hobbyist/musician

Musical Style:
alternative/synth/pop/punk
read less
35 of 38 people (92%) people found this review helpful. Did you?
Thanks for your opinion!