Behringer N11999 -

I needed a cheap line mixer for synths. This does the job: routing is simple, and the 3-band EQ is usable. But the microphone preamps are hissy above 50% gain, and the plastic chassis feels cheap.

Clean power, zero floor noise when idle, and it doesn't heat up much. The bad: The cooling fan is loud . It sounds like a tiny jet engine. Fine for a live show, but impossible to use in a quiet studio.

I picked up the Behringer NX1000 to power a pair of passive PA speakers for small gigs. For under $250, this thing is a beast. It’s ridiculously lightweight (under 7 lbs) compared to the old iron amps it replaced. The SmartSense power supply handles voltage dips well, and the built-in crossover is useful for subs. behringer n11999

DSP magic on a budget, but fragile knobs Rating: 3.5/5

However, build quality is a mixed bag. The plastic encoder knobs feel wobbly, and one of my Speakon outputs was slightly misaligned. Also, the software app is clunky. For permanent installs where you set it once and forget it, it's fantastic. For touring, spend more on a QSC or Crown. (e.g., UB1202 or X1204USB) Common mis-type for old "Eurorack" models. I needed a cheap line mixer for synths

Option 1: If you meant the Behringer NX1000 (or similar NX/NU series power amp) The NX series is a very popular ultra-lightweight class-D amplifier.

Having the ability to set limiters, delays, and 4-band EQs directly on the amp is a game-changer at this price point. The NX3000D drives my 8-ohm tops easily without clipping. Clean power, zero floor noise when idle, and

It works, but the preamps are noisy Rating: 3/5

Unreal power for the price, but mind the fan noise Rating: 4/5