I always encourage you to shop around for the best prices at the time you are viewing this. Using these links helps support this content. *all links should be considered affiliate links. License this music: Track: Solid by Ben Beiny I don’t have a Windows PC at this time to test these so let me know which works best for you. If you’re on a PC (Windows) you can use VoiceMeeter which also includes VoiceMeeter Banana for more functionality and Virtual Audio Cables. There are many ways to setup Voicemeeter and no one way is more objective than the next. These Mixers act much like a normal analogue mixer except they exist virtually on your computer. Other apps you could use on a mac include: Voicemeeter, Voicemeeter Banana, and Voicemeeter Potato are Virtual Audio Mixers developed by VB-Audio. The app I used in this video to combine channels from the Scarlett 2i4 is available for free in the App Store: LadioCast Soundflower: (read the instructions about how to install on your mac as it can require you to create permissions on your computer). The other app you’ll use, to combine the channels, will output all the audio to Soundflower and thus create a single channel for VOIP. This is what you will choose as your microphone input in those apps. While Soundflower is no longer and app, it’s an extension for mac that will show up as an input when using VOIP apps like Skype. If you’re on a mac, regardless of which app you choose, you’ll need a free app called Soundflower to act as the input for all other channels. To make this work, I’ve found a series of apps that will allow you to combine these discrete channels into a single mono input for Skype and other apps that have microphone inputs. ![]() This is usually channel one on your interface or the left side of a stereo output. Skype and other VOIP apps often only accept one channel of audio. If you want to use Skype with an audio interface like a Focusrite, a mixer that sends separate channels via USB or an audio recorder that records to individual tracks but can also function as an interface like the Zoom H6, and you need more than one microphone to be “heard” by Skype (podcast co-host, interviewee, etc) then you have a problem.
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