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Phonic Helix 24 Channel Firewire Mixer Review

February 16th, 2007 by mark

sample_a_2_r1_c1.gifIn a previous post I briefly wrote about the Phonic Helix 24 Channel mixer, but I didn’t really go into as much detail as I think it deserves. So I’m going to write a full blown write-up/review/whatever you want to call it about the Helix 24.

Phonic is a relatively unknown company, but they claim they’ve been around for 25 years. They make mixers, digital interfaces, amplifiers, and speakers, but don’t really have a name in the industry so I doubt many professional sound engineers, especially live engineers, would trust them.

The Helix 24 “channel” is effectively 16 channels and 4 sub groups. I think they get to claim the extra 8 from the Auxes or Main stereo channels. 16 Channels might be seriously lacking if you wanted to use it for live applications, but for recording, 16 channels is plenty. All 16 mic/line channels have a built in preamp with external gain control, so when you change the gain control it affects the signal that the computer receives. Every channel also includes a 3-band EQ which, once again, is kind of on the skimpy side for live audio, but plenty for recording. The signal that goes into the computer is pre-eq anyway so its really only useful for monitoring. Only the first 4 channels have a pad if you have something that’s really loud, but I haven’t found an instrument yet that requires the pad to keep from peaking.

p42002m.jpgAs far as Auxiliary outputs, the Helix 24 is mediocre. It claims it has “8″ AUX Returns, but its really 4 stereo AUX returns and 6 AUX Sends. Effectively, you have easy control over 4 AUX’s for monitoring. So for monitoring you can have 4 different monitor mixes and, if necessary, one person can use the main headphone for their mix. One side note though, if you want to actually be able to hear from the AUX’s you need a headphone amplifier because they’re unpowered signals.

I’ve had this mixer for a little over a year now. The first thing that I used it for was recording Running Blind. I immediately fell in love with the ability to play like I’m in a live setting, but actually have every channel going straight to a computer which can be mixed later. It kind of gives the best of both worlds of digital and analog. The audio quality that comes through the firewire sounds great, but every once and awhile the connection will get a little flaky on me. Sometimes I have to restart the computer or mixer to get the recording software to start receiving audio again. One morning I spent over 2 hours trying to get it working and finally got it running by uninstalling and reinstalling the drivers. That was in Windows and was quite a pain. But I recently acquired a MacBook and I’m hoping it likes OS X a little better. Windows + Adobe Audition wasn’t bad at all, it just had a few reliability issues here and there. But when it works, it works nicely.
helixboard24firewire-front.jpgOne thing that’s great about the Helix 24 is that you can also use it for live sound. Whenever we’re rehearsing we just plug everything into it and use a set of studio monitors to amplify whatever we need. Sometime we plug everything in, sometimes we just plug in a few vocal microphones.

Overall, I really enjoy and definitely don’t regret my purchase of the Helix 24. It does everything I want in a recording/live mixer. And one of the greatest things about the Helix 24 is it’s price point. $729 for a 16-channel recording mixer isn’t bad at all. Mackie has a very similar mixer which they sell for $1250. So you get practically the same thing, but for $500 cheaper. Thank you Phonic for making a very affordable recording console for the musician looking for a way to do multi-track recording without robbing a bank.

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Posted in Recording, Review, Mixers |

5 Responses

  1. Mark Says:

    I’ve discovered that Windows Vista does not have drivers that support this mixer as of March 5th, 2007. The Windows XP Drivers for the Helix 24 are incompatible with Vista.

  2. hillbilly Says:

    i just got mine,,

    they upgraded, they now have the mk2 which gives you more options on the fx, and has a new digital power supply as opposed to the old heat sink of the mk1 model..

    it was a pain to get to work,, but as soon as i did,, i saved the template,, and now it takes less than 2 minutes to get set up..

    i get to officially use it with my band tomorrow,, im all of excited..

    hb

  3. Josh Says:

    Great mixer but for some reason i can’t get it to work with windows media player… it’s driving me mental.

  4. Josh Says:

    I take that back. I JUST fixed it. But it was still only because it was stupid in the first place.

    Otherwise, it’s an awesome mixer…

  5. Cosmo Says:

    Updated drivers for this board are on the Phonic site. They have made for a very stable Windows environment.

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