The jogs on the Numark Party Mix are tiny and far from the best-feeling ones out there, though you can’t expect much in the sub-US$100 price range. The Numark Party Mix ships with Virtual DJ LE, which is the “intro” version of Virtual DJ 8. I amm not a fan of the built-in cable: if it breaks, you won’t be able to replace it yourself. In the back of the unit is a pair of RCA Master outputs, a button for choosing from among the four LED light modes (more on them later on), the three LED RGB lights, and a USB cable that’s attached to the unit. It also has a Browse button for going through your Virtual DJ library, track load buttons, a Master output knob, headphone mix and volume knobs, and a crossfader. It’s a two-channel controller, and each channel has a tiny jogwheel, a volume fader, two-band EQs (highs and lows) and a gain knob, four performance pad buttons with a pad mode selector (letting you switch among cue, loop, sampler, and effect modes), sync and transport controls, headphone cue button, a short throw pitch fader, and a Scratch on/off button (similar to the “Vinyl” button on CDJs). The Numark Party Mix is small and light – a 12.9″ iPad Pro feels big and hefty in comparison. Video Review First Impressions / Setting up
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