30.12.2020

Djay Pro No Sound In Headphones

We moved to a new shop! Head over here to see what's new. Sep 12, 2018  If you have a bluetooth speaker you can connect it to your Mac and send the main audio to the bluetooth speaker and the pre-cue to your headphones. Anything that shows up under the sound settings on your Mac you can use it as an audio output on Djay Pro 2. More posts from the Beatmatch community Posted by 4 days ago. Mar 09, 2014  Your Questions: Why Won’t My DJ Splitter Cable Work? Phil Morse March 9, 2014 Read time: 3 mins. Or simply don’t currently have, a pro DJ audio interface (or a controller with one built in), an audio splitter cable is a great way to get going, or a sensible backup to have too. I’ve had one kicking around in my gig bag for.

Djay Pro 2 Ipad

  • User Manual for djay for iOS; How do I get started with djay for iOS? What is the difference between the free version and the Pro version? Which MIDI controllers are supported by djay for iOS? I have bought older versions of djay before. Am I entitled for an upgrade discount? How do I reinstall an older version of djay for iOS (djay 2 or djay Pro)?
  • HP PCs - Resolving Headphones and Headset Problems (Windows 8) Before you begin. One supports only sound to the headphones, and the other supports sound to the headphones and the use of a microphone. Examples: 'LaserJet Pro P1102 paper jam', 'EliteBook 840 G3 bios update' Search help. Tips for better search results.
I've made a mapping Djay Pro to work with xdj rx. I've managed to mapp as much as i could, the only thing that i didn't manage to mapp was the jog led's and the level vu meters of the channels and the master level.I hope u like this mapping... Enjoy!!!Sorry for my english!

1- Play/Pause

2- Cue

3- Skip 4 beat’s backward’s

4- Skip 4 beat’s forward’s

5- Load previous track

6- Load next track

7- Reverse

8- Reset tempo

9- Loop in

10- Loop out

11- Reloop on/off

12- Loop half

13- Loop double

14- Fx1 enabled

15- Fx2 enabled

16- Fx1/Fx2 parameter adjust

17- Scratch mode on/off

18- Sync on/off

19- Master on/off

20- Tempo range

21- Key on/off

22- Tempo

23- Scratch

24- Pitch bend

——————————————————

25- Hot cue 1,2,3,4

A- Hot cue1 (28+A - Delete Hot cue1)

Djay Pro No Sound In Headphones

B- Hot cue2 (28+B - Delete Hot cue2)

C- Hot cue3 (28+C - Delete Hot cue3)

D- Hot cue4 (28+D - Delete Hot cue4)

28+25- Hot cue 5,6,7,8

A- Hot cue5 (28+A - Delete Hot cue5)

B- Hot cue6 (28+B - Delete Hot cue6)

C- Hot cue7 (28+C - Delete Hot cue7)

D- Hot cue8 (28+D - Delete Hot cue8)

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26- Auto beat loop

A- Beat loop 1

B- Beat loop 2

C- Beat loop 4

D- Beat loop 8

28+A- Beat loop 1/16

28+B- Beat loop 1/8

28+C- Beat loop 1/4

28+D- Beat loop 1/2

——————————————————

28+26 Sampler

A- Play Sample 1

B- Play Sample 2

C- Play Sample 3

D- Play Sample 4

28+A- Play Sample 5

28+B- Play Sample 6

——————————————————

27- Fx

A- Absorb Fx

B- Drift Fx

C- Sway Fx

Djay pro no sound in headphones video

D- Crush Fx

28+A- Punch Fx

28+B- Twist Fx

28+C- Low-Pass

28+D- High-Pass

——————————————————

28+27- Bounce loops

A- Bounce loop 1

B- Bounce loop 2

C- Bounce loop 4

D- Bounce loop 8

28+A- Bounce loop 1/16

28+B- Bounce loop 1/8

28+C- Bounce loop 1/4

28+D- Bounce loop 1/2

——————————————————

29- Music library select

30- Toggle sample

31- Automix on/off

32- Library expand on/off

33- Focus playlist

34- Rec on/off

35- Move up/down in library (focus tracks)

36- Load track left (Deck 1) and right (Deck 2)

37- Change video transition

38- Master volume

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Our reader’s letter today is from Gerald, who writes: “I have an Ion Discover DJ controller. I like it a lot. I used the tips I found about a DJ splitter cable (stereo – going out to two mono) but I am struggling with the software. I do not understand the routing nor how to set up the supplied MixVibes Cross LE software to allow me to use my splitter cables. I have a gig coming up and am trying to get all my gear set up. Can you help?”

Digital DJ Tips says:

For those of you just starting out with very cheap DJ gear, or an iPad, iPhone or even Android DJ program, you may be having great fun with your DJ program or basic controller, but wondering how the hell you get your headphones and your speakers plugged in and working independently. This ability to “cue” (to listen “secretly” to the other music source, the one that’s not playing) is fundamental to DJing, and cheap laptop controllers and all iOS/Android software doesn’t have it built-in.

If you’ve dug a bit deeper, you may have found out – like Gerald – that a DJ splitter cable can be your saviour. This semi-legendary “hack” works by splitting the stereo signal into two independent mono signals, one for each of your required outputs. Sure, you’re now playing in mono – as you plug your speakers into one of these outputs, and your headphones into the other – but it’s a little-known fact that most “real” club sound systems are in mono anyway, and it’s a very small price to pay to be able to DJ with the gear in front of you in exactly the same way all DJs do.

Trouble is, getting any old splitter cable and plugging it in and hooking up your speakers and headphones isn’t enough. Firstly, you need a DJ splitter cable (the one we recommend is here). This genuinely puts the left channel to one pseudo-stereo output and the right to the other. Having the kind of splitter cable sold to share a single headphones output on an iPod, for instance, won’t work because it sends the same thing down each of its outputs.

Secondly, you need to tell your software that’s what you’re doing. You have to find the audio output, audio routing or audio configuration settings and look for “mono split”, “split mono” or “DJ splitter” setting – the one that shows all audio going through the single PC/iOS headphones output and also shows both the speakers and headphones plugging into this. In your case, Gerald, MixVibes has a page here that tells you exactly how to do it.

And don’t forget, you have to plug the speakers and headphones into the correct sockets on your cable! If things aren’t behaving how you feel they should (eg the “cue” buttons are turning the main audio on or off, or the crossfader is affecting your headphones) try swapping the headphones and speakers over at the cable.

One final thing that sometimes confuses people about all of this is a question that goes something like: “But I’ve got four decks and a sampler, don’t I need five outputs, not two?” The reason the answer to this is “no” is that even if you had 99 decks (and Virtual DJ 7 can, folks!), the mixer section of your software mixes all of these inputs into just two – one for your headphones,a dn one for the speakers – so however complex your software audio is, you only ever need two outputs – and if you can’t afford, or simply don’t currently have, a pro DJ audio interface (or a controller with one built in), an audio splitter cable is a great way to get going, or a sensible backup to have too. I’ve had one kicking around in my gig bag for 10 years.

• Our recommended splitter cable is here; we also have an article and video that goes into this in a lot more detail here: All You Need To Know About DJ Splitter Cables

Djay 2

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