

- #Vestax typhoon dj controller drivers#
- #Vestax typhoon dj controller driver#
- #Vestax typhoon dj controller pro#
- #Vestax typhoon dj controller software#
- #Vestax typhoon dj controller windows#
While it’s non-standard to have faders rather than knobs for low, mid and high to adjust the EQ on the decks, they work well, cutting the frequency 100% at their lowest throw. The crossfader is good, the tempo faders are short-throw (ie hard to adjust very accurately) but good quality and the other knobs and faders are also of a quality that’s higher than you may imagine. Trust me that it’s great to have it on a DJ controller. It’s a classic DJ effect and one you’ll recognise instantly if you’re not sure what it is. Here’s how the filter works: Hitting the filter button on the deck that’s playing and moving the jogwheel left or right will progressively introduce a high-pass or a low-pass filter. These are presumably there because you can also use the jogwheels to control one of the built-in effects, a “filter”, and thus will need another way to speed up and slow down tunes when the jogwheel is assigned this way. Vestax has included a Sync button on each deck to quickly get songs to the same speed, and also two controls to nudge the record in the same way as I just described with the jogwheels, to speed things up or slow them down. With these three controls and the addition of the shift control to double up functionality, you can accurately set up tunes ready for play, skip through them, start them easily and return to the start for whatever reason from there on in. In useĮach deck (the controller is divided right down the middle apart from the effects and output adjust controls, the left-hand side controlling the left deck and the right-hand side controlling the right deck) has a big play button, a cue button (to set where you wish to start play from) and a cup button (to take the song back to the cue point). The Typhoon\’s controls are well laid-out, although those EQs are non-standard. Turntablists should look elsewhere, though.


#Vestax typhoon dj controller pro#
Thus the jogwheels cleverly serve two functions, and this is a big plus of all Vestax controllers over the competition. It’s worth bearing in mind that with this unit pro “scratching” is hard due to it’s not being instantaneous (unlike the more expensive VCI-300 for instance), but this is not going to be an issue for most mixing DJs. If you touch the jogwheels at the edge, they instead act as if you’re slightly slowing down or speeding up the playing song, depending again on whether you move in a clockwise or anti-clockwise direction. Then you can move the wheel backwards and forwards to adjust where you are in the song – a “scratch”. You’ll be using the jogwheels a lot with this unit, and I’m pleased to say they’re high-quality, sharing the same functionality as with Vestax’s other DJ controllers. If you touch the metal part of the wheel, it is as if you are touching and holding a record on a normal turntable – the music stops. It is a funky red and black colour with brushed metal jogwheels, which seems to have divided opinion out there I think it looks pretty good, but it’s a personal taste of course.
#Vestax typhoon dj controller drivers#
For both the PC (with drivers supplied) and Mac (no drivers necessary), it is a plug-and-play device, coming with Traktor LE (a cut-down version of the industry-standard DJ software), a USB cable and some quick start instruction. The Vestax Typhoon takes its power from the computer, so no need for a power supply in the vast majority of cases.
#Vestax typhoon dj controller driver#
The Typhoon comes with driver CD, quick start manual and USB cable. As such, this is less of a niche product.
#Vestax typhoon dj controller software#
Furthermore, the Spin only controls Algoriddim’s djay software (that integrates tightly with iTunes) while this controls industry-standard Traktor.
#Vestax typhoon dj controller windows#
It is heavily related to the Vestax Spin, however, the latter is Mac-only, while this is for PC (including 64-bit for Vista and Windows 7, but not AMD) and Mac. There’s a microphone socket too for you budding mobile jocks. This means you just need a hi-fi, some powered speakers (such as good computer speakers) or another way of playing the music, plus a pair of headphones, and you’re off. It has a soundcard built-in, saving you the need to buy a DJ soundcard separately – unlike some other DJ controllers like Vestax’s own VCI-100 and the cheaper Numark Mixtrack. If you’re looking for a budget way to get into digital DJing, you now have the Vestax Typhoon controller to add to your shortlist.
