Is bluetooth not an option for Stagetraxx for iOS? I want to get rid of the cables on stage and send via bluetooth to my mixer using Xvive P3 BT. I can not find a setting for that.
Sending audio via bluetooth
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I send my iPads audio directly via a paired BT to a stereo BT receiver and then into the mixer. Works perfectly. Not familiar with your gadget but if it can be found in iOS BT settings it can work
Seems like this would work through the headphone out. Send your tracks to there and connect the ipad to your Xvive through Bluetooth.
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Headphone or speaker??? Not sure.. I just know that when the receiver is connected via BT, it mutes speaker/headphone and goes out to mixer. I bought my BT receiver at Amazon
jzavaletta I want to send it to my mixer with the Xvive p3 connected.
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No idea what those gadgets are … sorry. All I know is that if the XVive is a BT receiver and you can “pair” it with the iPad, it should send the audio to the mixer.
jzavaletta do you use Stagetraxx 3 to send audio via bt? How do you det it up? I can connect the iPad but can’t send any audio from ST3?
If you connect a bluetooth audio device to your iPad all audio output including ST3 is automatically sent to that output. You can not change that in ST3 to something else.
peter I’m sorry but I just can’t get it to work… I can send audio to bt from Spotify, youtube etc, but nothing from ST3?
What does your audio routing look like in ST3?
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Riff the only option available for main/aux output is ”speaker”
Solved it.
Did a full backup and reinstalled ST3, and now it seems to work.
Just be aware of using this for playback of backing tracks the transmitter only goes from 73 Hz - 17.5 kHz
So you will lose low end information and the very highs or air in the tracks
Depending on your speaker set up this may or may not be important to you
If your using large subs this will be an issue and unwanted
the audio range of human earing is, Human ear perceives frequencies between 20 Hz (lowest pitch) to 20 kHz (highest pitch) and that's with A 1 earing in children most people over 20 can't get anywhere near that more like 50hz to 10hz when you have bass below 50hz it just rumbles pointless going below 100hz and above 15khz it just adds mush and squeal to your mix . i roll off the bass at 100hz and the highs at 15khz on all my tracks much cleaner sound and a lot less mush in the mix
Agree. I suppose if you’re in a recording studio with compressors etc, you need 20-20K, but for the rest of us when we are doing live gigs with people consuming adult beverages LOL 100-15K should be fine.
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davedroug the audio range of human earing is, Human ear perceives frequencies between 20 Hz (lowest pitch) to 20 kHz (highest pitch) and that's with A 1 earing in children most people over 20 can't get anywhere near that more like 50hz to 10hz when you have bass below 50hz it just rumbles pointless going below 100hz and above 15khz it just adds mush and squeal to your mix . i roll off the bass at 100hz and the highs at 15khz on all my tracks much cleaner sound and a lot less mush in the mix
You are technically correct in what you say but your logic I believe is wrong, when it comes to the end result having the majority of audience hear your sound that’s clear and not muddy or have no punch, by cutting those extreme frequencies you are actually making things worse for those that slightly lack those frequencies so my mixes have the opposite EQ I boost the bottom and tops to compensate for older peoples hearing loss which most my audience is elderly and have hearing deficiencies, so that way majority of them get a normal sound , there’s nothing worse than hearing a muddy sound due to lack of top end so even though I agree with your comment I think you are making things worse for your live audience in general.
Uh, the range between 50hz and 100hz is vitally important for kick and bass especially for dance music. I would never ever buy a PA system that has a roll off at 100hz. Sub 100 is also not the range that often is perceived as "muddy". This is more in the area between 200 and 300.