Understanding how to navigate, organize, and deploy the WING Library is essential for accelerating your workflow, ensuring flawless performances, and maximizing the console's 48-channel architecture. 1. Core Architecture of the WING Library
: He navigated to the Global Show tab. He had saved a "Final Soundcheck" snapshot just an hour prior. With one tap, the motorized faders danced into position, snapping to the exact levels of the opening number.
Use the on-screen keyboard to name the preset, assign a category tag (e.g., Drums, Vocals), and press . Recalling a Snippet or Snapshot
The library is not a closed system. Behringer has built extensibility into the core of the WING.
The Preset section is where audio engineers spend most of their time during soundcheck and prep. The WING categorizes presets into functional modules to prevent accidental overwrites. Signal Processing Presets
The WING utilizes a 10.1-inch touch screen combined with a "Section" button layout.
, including routing, preamp gains, and compressor settings. Use these to swap complete configurations between different bands during a festival or service. Snippets (Cues)
: Used for short recorded audio segments within the mixer's workflow. Management and Storage
Save complex I/O patches, such as digital stagebox assignments (AES50) or USB audio interface setups. Show Management vs. The Library
Snapshots capture the exact state of the mixer at a specific moment. They record fader positions, mute statuses, panning, and processing blocks.
The Behringer WING represents a significant paradigm shift in digital mixing console architecture, moving away from the rigid "scene-based" workflow of its predecessors (like the X32 series) toward a modular, source-centric approach. At the core of this evolution is the . This report details the functionality of the Library system, explaining how it manages Channel Strips, Effects Presets, Routing Snapshots, and Shows. It highlights how the Library facilitates a "constructive" workflow where users build mixes from a database of sources rather than simply recalling static snapshots of an entire console state.
Traditional digital mixing consoles typically rely on "Scenes" or "Snapshots" to recall console settings. While effective for static setups, this method often overwrites global settings when only minor changes are needed.
Understanding how to navigate, organize, and deploy the WING Library is essential for accelerating your workflow, ensuring flawless performances, and maximizing the console's 48-channel architecture. 1. Core Architecture of the WING Library
: He navigated to the Global Show tab. He had saved a "Final Soundcheck" snapshot just an hour prior. With one tap, the motorized faders danced into position, snapping to the exact levels of the opening number.
Use the on-screen keyboard to name the preset, assign a category tag (e.g., Drums, Vocals), and press . Recalling a Snippet or Snapshot
The library is not a closed system. Behringer has built extensibility into the core of the WING. behringer wing library
The Preset section is where audio engineers spend most of their time during soundcheck and prep. The WING categorizes presets into functional modules to prevent accidental overwrites. Signal Processing Presets
The WING utilizes a 10.1-inch touch screen combined with a "Section" button layout.
, including routing, preamp gains, and compressor settings. Use these to swap complete configurations between different bands during a festival or service. Snippets (Cues) Understanding how to navigate, organize, and deploy the
: Used for short recorded audio segments within the mixer's workflow. Management and Storage
Save complex I/O patches, such as digital stagebox assignments (AES50) or USB audio interface setups. Show Management vs. The Library
Snapshots capture the exact state of the mixer at a specific moment. They record fader positions, mute statuses, panning, and processing blocks. He had saved a "Final Soundcheck" snapshot just
The Behringer WING represents a significant paradigm shift in digital mixing console architecture, moving away from the rigid "scene-based" workflow of its predecessors (like the X32 series) toward a modular, source-centric approach. At the core of this evolution is the . This report details the functionality of the Library system, explaining how it manages Channel Strips, Effects Presets, Routing Snapshots, and Shows. It highlights how the Library facilitates a "constructive" workflow where users build mixes from a database of sources rather than simply recalling static snapshots of an entire console state.
Traditional digital mixing consoles typically rely on "Scenes" or "Snapshots" to recall console settings. While effective for static setups, this method often overwrites global settings when only minor changes are needed.