Xenyx Q802 Driver For Mac

Xenyx Q802 Driver For Mac Average ratng: 8,2/10 2306 votes

Thought I'd share this discovery in case folk like me have any Behringer AI, Mixer etc or anything using one of their bespoke drivers. I've just been rebuilding my PC and when I went to Behringer to get a driver for my Xenyx Q802USB, the download driver page redirected me to a generic site to down load ASIO4ALL - NOT what I wanted!! Looks like some streamlining perhaps after the recent take over? Good job I have all my recording apps and the driver on my laptop, so just transferred it over.

Jun 4, 2014 - It's very easy to use a USB Mixer with StreetJelly.com. Anna Laube shows how it's done in the video with her Behringer XENYX Q802 USB.

Ntfs for mac 10.7.5. When installing, please ensure that the compatibility layer is installed to make it a drop-in replacement for MacFUSE. OSXFUSE is a drop-in replacement for which is no longer actively maintained and not known to work well with OSX Lion (there might be some versions of MacFUSE that might work with Lion but I didn’t investigate further). The one I tested with is.

And now my AI is talking to Reaper again! So if you've not got a secure copy of the driver you're using, get one sorted asap, as you never know when you may have to reinstall it! Install fuse for humminbird.

The Xenyx mixers are 'class-compliant' audio devices. This means they don't implement any vendor-specific nonsense and, as such, should be able to use a standard USB audio driver. On Linux, for instance, they are plug and play using the standard built-in USB audio driver. Techy stuff below: In fact, what most people refer to as 'drivers' on Windows aren't really full drivers at all: almost all USB audio devices are based on the USB audio standards and will use the standard USB drivers built into Windows (or ASIO4ALL if you want to use ASIO). When they ship a 'driver' it is often just additional configuration to fix stuff on the USB interface that is broken or proprietary. For example, the Boss GT-100 USB interface looks like a 4-channel (e.g.

'quadraphonic') capture stream when it is, in fact, 2 parallel stereo channels (one is 'wet' the other is 'dry'). The Boss driver will contain configuration information to tell the standard driver that the stream should be interpreted as 2x2 channel rather than 1x4 channel. The 'driver' will often also contain additional information that cannot be described on the standard USB interface such as MIDI port naming and onboard mixer connectivity mapping. The driver may also ship with utilities such as proprietary mixer/dsp control apps. Cheers, Keith. Yes, but your device only uses the generic ASIO4ALL. IOW, I don;t know every manufactures driver status for every product.

IF they have a device specific driver, which Behringer does for most of it's newer gear, then you need to use that. Many companies make their own USB driver.

Yamaha, RME, Behringer, everybody. On some the entry level stuff they just use a generic driver. Any time you have an issue with something not working or to assure it will work in the first place, always use the most up to date driver for the specific piece of gear.

ETA: Another thing that needs to be kept up to date is the firmware. If you can get new firmware, you want to flash that then apply the latest driver.

Q802

My suspicion is that they used to produce their own 'drivers' but, as the Xenyx mixers are very generic USB audio devices, these 'drivers' really were just a rebadged version of the standard USB audio drivers. It's likely the 'drivers' was really just a config file which renamed the device name from 'Texas Instruments PCM2902 Audio Codec', which is what the USB device descriptor describes it as, to 'Xenyx XXX'. I suspect they decided the effort in creating and maintaining this rebadged version of the generic drivers wasn't worth bothering with. Cheers, Keith. I suspect they are just applying some common sense.