SELLING Selling a whole bunch of streaming equipment!

Jaxel

Administrator
Hey, I'm selling a whole bunch of streaming equipment! Capture cards, mixers, cases, etc! Just let me know if you are interested in any of it:

912e-MFq8PL._SX425_.jpg


Blackmagic Decklink 4K Extreme ($600, MSRP $950)
- this card can not only capture FULL 1080p at 60fps, it can also capture in 4K or in 3D! It supports not only HDMI, but Dual-6G SDI. This is a professional level card.

41ZHJuHNPaL.jpg


AVerMedia c127 Game Broadcaster HD ($100, out of stock)
- this is by far the best card AVerMedia has ever made; its better than every single current card they make; their current cards suck. Its honestly the best capture card I've ever used, which is why I've bought 4 over them over the years... but AVerMedia no longer sells them. Like the BMIP, it does up to 1080p30.
 
Last edited:
Hmmm.... Hey, Jaxel, I'm interested in that blackmagic intensity pro, but I know absolutely nothing about these things. So I just have a question, since I'd never actually live stream (My connection is way too bad for that), could I just capture and save video with it?
 
  • Thread starter
  • Admin
  • #3
Hmmm.... Hey, Jaxel, I'm interested in that blackmagic intensity pro, but I know absolutely nothing about these things. So I just have a question, since I'd never actually live stream (My connection is way too bad for that), could I just capture and save video with it?
Yes, thats actually what it was made for... which is why Blackmagic cards are the only cards that can capture raw video. All other brand cards do h264 processing which reduces quality of the video... which is normally fine, because broadcasting on the internet is inherently low quality. The Blackmagic cards are designed for archival quality recordings; they just ended up being used for streaming.
 
That's good! But there's an important question.... If I was to buy it from you, would you even send it to the Czech Republic? Cause I suspect it'll cost a lot and take quite some time to ship.
 
  • Thread starter
  • Admin
  • #5
That's good! But there's an important question.... If I was to buy it from you, would you even send it to the Czech Republic? Cause I suspect it'll cost a lot and take quite some time to ship.
Yeah... it would cost anywhere between $34 and $72 to ship though...
 
  • Thread starter
  • Admin
  • #7
The BMIP and one of the c127s have been sold (still have another c127 for sale). I've updated the OP.
 
  • Thread starter
  • Admin
  • #8
Adding a new item up for sale!

header_mixer_imx644.jpg


1.png 2.png

Yamaha IMX644 Digital Installation Mixer ($400, MSRP $2099)
http://www.yamahaproaudio.com/global/en/products/mixers/imx644/

This is a professional quality digital installation mixer. Its designed to be used as a mixer in large event halls, churches, events, etc. This is actually the mixer I use in all my live streams right now... I bought a second one and I am selling my original. Why am I selling my original? Well this mixer actually has 6 mono-input channels, and the dial for channel mono-1 is actually broken. The channel itself works perfectly fine, but the dial is broken... so if you want to control the levels of mono-1, you need to use the USB controlled software (yes, thats right, you can control this mixer from your PC). I'm sure its a simple $2 fix to replace the dial, but I'm not that kind of guy anymore. The dials for the other 5 mono-input channels, the 4 stereo-input channels and the 4 output channels work perfectly fine.

I think this is the best mixer you can buy if you're a tournament streamer. Its light weight and small, making it good for travel. In addition to this, it has FOUR output channels, which is a god send. Using the USB software, you can control which inputs go to which channels. So for a live event I would have the commentators on the mono inputs, and the game audio on the stereo inputs. Then for the outputs, I would have the first output going to the stream, which is the main mix of both the game audio and the commentators. The second channel would just have the game audio, which could go out to the venue's PA system so that spectators can hear the game (but not the commentators). On the third channel I would just output the commentators, in case we had a skype-style call in so that the people on the other end of the call would hear the voices, but not the game... and the fourth channel output I havent found a need for yet.

This mixer also has a whole suite of tools to clean up your audio. I myself use a whole bunch of low-pass and high-pass filters to eradicate any sort of noise and hiss on the electrical lines. Its the main reason why when I stream, you don't really any sort of electrical noise in my videos. I don't do ANY post-production on the audio in our videos; the audio you hear on my youtube videos is the audio that goes out to the live stream viewers. You can hear it here:

Another interesting thing about this mixer is that the majority of it's ports are EUROBLOCK-3, rather than anything specific like RCA-Phono, 1/4" TRS or XLR-3. Why is this good? Well often you look at mixers and think, "this doesn't have enough RCA inputs, damn". Well at the professional level, mixers use EUROBLOCK instead; which can be wired into any type of input you want. So if you need more RCA inputs, you can make them! If you need more XLR inputs, you can make them!
 
  • Thread starter
  • Admin
  • #9
The Mackie 1402-VLZ3 Mixer has been sold, and thus removed from the listing. The other mixer and capture cards are still up for grabs!
 
Back