MICROPHONES
- Gefell UM70S
- Gefell MV691/M71
- Telefunken AR51
- Beyerdynamic m160
- Josephson C42 (2)
- Beyerdynamic M201 (2)
- AKG C451E/CK1
- AKG D-12 E
- EV RE-20 (2)
- Shure SM7b
- Sennheiser e902
- Blue B6 Lollipop
- Blue Baby Bottle
- AT 4033
- AT 4041 (stereo pair)
- Shure SM57 (a few)
- Shure SM58 (a few)
- MXL A55
- Beyerdynamic M-02
- Sennheiser e604 (3)
- Realistic 33-1090B PZM
- Concord mic for tape recorder
IN/OUT
- Lynx Aurora AD/DA
- Daking Mic Pres (8)
- Audient ASP 880
- Lynx AES16eSRC
- Neumann KH120 monitors
- Benchmark DAC-1
- Countryman Type 85 Active DI (2)
- Homebrew Jensen passive DIs
- FMR Audio RNP
- Baggs active PADI (2)
- Yorkville YSM-1p monitors
- Behringer Ultramatch Pro 24/96
MISC
- Mr Coffee BVMC-PJX-23
- Mackie MCU Pro
- Oz Audio HM-6
- Various headphones
- '70 Fender Vibrolux Reverb
- FMR RNC stereo compressor
- SWR Workingman's 12
- Roland U-20 synth
- Akai AX-60 synth
- i9 10900 DAW
SOFTWARE
Oz Audio HM-6
Sends 6 separate headphone mixes out to the floor, with balanced ins n outs, 4 channels, effects send/return, and real knobs! I got this like 20 years ago, still works flawlessly. Sadly, Oz Audio has since gone out of business. (There is another Oz Audio out there selling car stereo gear, but that is not the same company.) Mackie bought the design and sold it as the HMX-56, but that also has been waxed. Too bad, this is a pretty cool unit. Most folks use software mixers for headphone feeds now, but I find it 100x faster to just twist a knob than go scrolling through menus and mousing a volume slider. Oh well.