The Bad: No hard level settings for the headphone or main outputs. Acceptable sound quality with adequately high output levels in both the headphone and main outputs. Flexible layering options lets you shift between three control layers on some or all of the controls, while leaving other sections locked. The Good: Tons of pro-grade controls packed into a small surface. Full 4-channel operation requires included ASIO driver for Windows 2000/XP/Vista/Windows 7. Class-compliant MIDI/2-channel audio device for Windows. System Requirements: Class-compliant MIDI/4-channel audio device for Mac OSX. Weight: 2.2 pounds (1 kg), 3.3 pounds (1.5 kg) with the carrying caseĭimensions: 5.3 x 14 x 1.2 inches (13.5 x 35.8 x 3 cm) Ships with: Padded carrying case/DJ booth stand, USB cable, X:LINK (RJ45) cable, CD (Windows drivers, PDF guide, mappings) Price: $499 (MSRP) / $299 (common retail price)Ĭommunication: MIDI over USB (USB powered) Part update to the discontinued Xone:1D, and part open-ended answer to Native Instrument’s Kontrol X1 and F1, the Xone:K2 combines deep programmability with a 4-channel audio interface and proprietary X:LINK connection, making it suitable for a wide swath of digital DJing proclivities. After a lengthy build-up extending back to the 2011 BPM convention, Allen & Heath’s new contribution to the growing slim-line compact controller field, the Xone:K2, will hit the shelves at the end of this month.
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