![]() ![]() I know that you don't own one so I am taking this opportunity to try to share some info with you. What the driverack does for powered speakers is what signal processing does for passive speakers. I have seen other posts from you and you are a knowledgeable fella. It appears the PA2 can use an Ipad app, which is really cool. One thing I've learned from experience is to use the software to set them up verses the front knobs, which tend to be complicated to navigate. I would spend the extra $200 and get the extra outputs. This product seems to retail about $300 while the PA2 retails about $500. I don't have any experience on the PX, but what I know from reading, is its a 2in 4out (two main and two sub output) with all of the best two channel processing (geared toward the powered loudspeakers). All this being said, most of these cool tricks I have used on the Driverack PA2 and PA+ (2in 6out), and the Driverack 4800 (4in 8out). The possibilities are endless and the best part is all these setups can be named and saved as a show file and recalled in the future. If you set up a stage at one end of a long ball room, you could setup some satellite speakers 100 feet away and set a delay on them so they are time-aligned with your main rig. One can EQ the mains, run a separate EQ for your monitors or karaoke monitor, crossover your amps on a passive system, notch out unwanted frequency peaks to control feedback (you could actually just route a microphone through a channel if you want and use the feedback eliminator as a super-accurate notch filter. Bottom line, it is a well designed tool box full of all the stuff an engineer would want in a full rack of gear. I've used Drive Racks, up to the Drive Rack 4800 many times for my AV work on hundreds of corporate AV shows. ![]() Hi folks, Just wanted to chime in on this from a professional's perspective. ![]()
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