It’s got a metal chassis, all the nicely rubberised knobs are bolted down rather than just soldered into place, and the jogs, replaceable crossfader, rubberised transport controls and rather small backlit buttons all feel built to last if not best of the best, they’re definitely not rubbish either. Nice and compact (Reloop doesn’t go in for physical bloat either), the DJC.4 is equally well made, and indeed I am pretty sure they come from the same far eastern manufacturing conglomerate ultimately. It’s similar in look and feel to a Reloop controller, and that’s a compliment. Time to take a closer look… First impressions and setting up Which in a way, does turn out to be the case. If you’re looking for a well-built DJ controller to use with Virtual DJ software, that isn’t overly large, yet manages to pack in pretty much all the features a digital DJ would want for either home or public use, you’ll be interested in today’s review item, the new Stanton DJC.4. It feels right, it looks good, and with balanced and unbalanced outputs, aux and mic inputs, and inputs for two phono or line sources, it also looks almost too good to be true for the price.
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