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CNET editors' rating:
3.5 stars
Very good
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Product summary
The good: Includes full versions of DJ software; wide selection of inputs and outputs; no external power required; controls can be assigned to other audio programs using MIDI.
The bad: Joystick is unreliable; digital scratching doesn't sound like vinyl.
The bottom line: Budding laptop DJs will appreciate the way this compact portable device turns any laptop into a DJ rig, but for pros, it doesn't come close to the sound quality and tactile nature of vinyl.
Specifications: Audio output interface type: USB; Min Operating system: Apple MacOS X 10.2.6 or later; Sound output mode: 5.1 channel surround; See full specs
CNET editors' review
- Reviewed on: 06/15/2005
Measuring about 9 by 8 by 2.5 inches, the Hercules DJ Console is likely smaller than your laptop, although its size isn't much of a constraint; Hercules managed to fit 28 sliders, buttons, and dials onto the device without too much cramming. For mixing, you get a volume fader for each track and a smooth cross-fader to move between them, which slides about as lightly and smoothly as the cross-faders on pro mixers. A joystick in the center controls effects and acts as a mouse substitute for picking songs onscreen. We really appreciated the two Autobeat buttons; press one of them, and the song on that deck will fade in, automatically beat-matched (sweet). Pitch-bend buttons (0.1bpm per click), EQ, and fast-forward/rewind round out the equation.
On the front of the Hercules DJ Console, you'll find a dual RCA input for your backup CD player; a 1/4-inch stereo input for your microphone, with volume knob; and a headphone jack, also with volume knob. The headphone allows you to preview the next track so that you can use this thing without a mixer. Click the microphone knob in, and your music gets quieter so that people can hear you talking--a great feature for wedding DJs looking to amp up the crowd.
Each track also has bass, midrange, and treble EQ knobs that work fine, but we'd also like to see dropout buttons that remove the frequency range entirely so that you can cut the bass for four beats, then drop it back in. As things stand, this requires a superfast rotation to the left and back again.
A number of inputs and outputs line the back of the device, allowing the DJ Console to double as a top-notch USB audio device for listening to music at home. You'll find six RCA output plugs (for stereo or 5.1 surround sound), three digital coaxial outputs (also 2- or 6-channel), a digital optical TosLink input and output, a five-pin MIDI input and output, and the USB port. One jack you won't find on the DJ Console is a power input; the device gets its juice from your USB port, so connecting through a hub is probably not a good idea.
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