
The Pioneer DJM-850: A club-standard mixer, with a Traktor Scratch-certified sound card built in, and at a reasonable price (at least, as far as this end of the market goes).
Why a review of the Pioneer DJM-850 club mixer on a digital DJ site? First, because it’s got a Traktor Scratch-certified audio interface built-in (meaning you can use it with Traktor, or as a sound card for any DJ software). Second, because you’re likely to come across it when you play in clubs, so you should know a bit about it (even if only to be able to use some of its effects when you’re controller’s plugged into it in a DJ booth).
And finally, if you’re a Traktor user who aspires to a club-standard set-up at home – maybe to help you make the transition from DJing on controllers to being comfortable with using club-standard gear – this mixer will probably be on your shortlist. So let’s find out some more about it…
First impressions
It’s full-sized, metal, heavy, professional, and will be very familar if you’ve DJed on any Pioneer mixers since the DJM-600. Basically it’s an update of the DJM-800, which has been a club standard for many years.
It fits nicely between record decks, CDJs, or any other full-sized gear; sat next to most DJ controllers, it looks like a BMW X5 parked next to a Mini, so if you’re going to use it with a Kontrol X1, Kontrol F1 or Xone K2 alongside, make sure you have something to raise the height of your button box.
Sat next to most DJ controllers, it looks like a 4×4 parked next to a Mini…
Round the back are inputs for six line sources and two phono sources, plus one of the mixer’s two microphone inputs, (a TRS; there’s an XLR/TRS on the top panel in addition). There are outputs for master (XLR & RCA), booth (TRS) and record (RCA), plus ins/outs for an effects loop (TRS). There are four 1/8″ TRS control sockets for fader start connections to CDJs, with a DIN Midi out plus a single digital master out completing the typically extensive I/O.
Down the left-hand side of the top panel we find the microphone controls (two mics, shared two-band EQ plus an on/off/talkover switch), the “Sound Color” FX buttons, the four fader start on/off buttons, and finally the headphones controls and socket, complete with a mono split / stereo switch.

The DJM-850 with a pair of CDJ-900s is an attractive Traktor set-up especially since 2.5.1 dropped, as the CDJs now have native support and HID integration in the software.
On the right are the beat FX in their customary position, with a long, thin LED display screen, a rotary to select between 14 effects, a channel FX selector, a time knob plus BPM tap, BPM factor buttons, a level/depth (ie wet/dry) knob, and a master FX on/off button.
Just to the left of this effects strip is the master/booth output strip, with a 15-LED dual VU, a master level, a booth level, and a balance control.
Indented switches let you choose between mono or stereo output, and adjust the EQ behaviour (full kill or less abrupt), as well as the curve of the channel faders and crossfader.
Each of the four strips on the main mixer section has a toggle for line / phono (or line 2) / USB audio, a gain (“trim”), three-band EQ, “color” knob, the line fader, and a crossfader assign three-way switch (A/B/thru), and at the very bottom of course is the crossfader itself. The crossfader is looser than the line faders, but not particularly so; it’s not ideal for scratching. Each line also has a 15-bar VU up the left of its EQ controls.
Setting up
We tested the mixer using Traktor Scratch Pro 2.5, controlled with timecode from a pair of Denon DJ SC3900s (which we happen to be working with on a project here in the Digital DJ Tips workshop at the moment).
At first, I didn’t like the fact that the USB is on the top, but it made sense when I thought about it…
Setting up was really very easy – you install the supplied driver, which has a control untility for routing the audio (you can also download it from the PioneerDJ support site, MacBook Air users!), plug in the USB and launch Traktor.
The software picked up the audio routing with no extra effort required, so we then switched two of the channels to timecode in the Pioneer utility, connected the Denon DJ SC3900s to the laptop too, installed their TSI file, and hey presto! A complete Traktor Scratch Pro 2.5 digital vinyl system complete with Midi control over Traktor via the SC3900s.
One thing: At first, I didn’t like the fact that the USB is on the top, but it made sense when I thought about it – no fiddling around the back to set things up in a dark club.
In use
With Traktor and the (frankly lovely) Denon DJ SC3900s, I found the Pioneer mixer an absolute blast to use. The effects sound fantastic, and it was really nice to have simple plug-and-play control over Traktor Scratch Pro.

The DJM-850 Setting Utility is clear and easy and allows you complete control over the input and output routing to and from the DJM-850's audio interface. (Click to enlarge.)
The sound card has a really nice thump (at least, it does through room-sized KRKs!); Pioneer screams about the sound quality of the DJM-850, and it apparently uses the same circuitry found in the more expensive DJM-900nexus and DJM-2000 mixers. No complaints here.
Against DJing with a controller, the thing that really stands out for me is having decent gain staging, thanks to those channel VUs in addition to the master VUs – most DJ controllers really fall down here.
I also liked having a choice of knob-controllable sweep effects rather than just filter. An on-board sampler would have been nice, though.
Those hardware effects are really what this mixer is all about, ultimately, as they’re what stand it apart from both standard four-channel DJ mixers and DJ controllers with their software effects. So let’s take some time to look at what’s here:
Sound Color FX
These are best thought of as “the effects that the big grey knob above each channel fader controls”.
Many DJ mixers and DJ controllers have a filter knob in this position, and indeed one of the options on the DJM-850 is a filter; you press one of the four Sound Color FX buttons, not surprisingly the one marked “filter”, and as you’d then expect, turning the centre-clicked “color” pot to the left gives you a low pass filter, and to the right a high-pass filter.

The Sound Color FX section. The four buttons select your chosen effect, then you control it using the 'color' knob (top right), engaging the beat button tucked top left of the knob if you want the extra beat modulation described in the text.
So what of the other four? Well, “Gate” only lets the loudest parts of the track “through”, cutting other stuff out. I like this because it lets you mix two tunes together with more control; you could loop the last few bars of an outgoing tune, and then use Gate to progressively remove percussion elements every eight bars at your leisure, until you’re left with just the kick drum (for instance).
Crush is a bitcrusher effect, which is something I’ve never used but it sounds, well, like a bitcrusher; think 1980s home PC sound output and you’re close.
Noise is the most unsubtle of the lot, mixing a loud whitish noise sweep over the music, with a kind of hi-pass/lo-pass filter applied to it progressively the further away in either direction you turn the knob from the centre click.
I can see this particular effect being really useful building out of breaks, for instance, because many productions use the a similar effect, so you can complement your music and add a bit of drama with this. It’s not for the faint hearted though, being pretty loud, so you may want to do it at reduced volume whe you’ve got two tracks going at once, over a louder source.
The “beat” button next to the “color” knob for each of the four channels lets the beat kick through the chosen effect; it’s almost like a compressor cutting the effect volume, adding a rhythmic quality to the overall sound.
Beat effects
These effects are positioned where they’ve always been on similar Pioneer club installation mixers, but as befits a new model, the quality has improved as have the number of effects available to you.
As befits a new model, the quality has improved as have the number of effects available
The screen shows you the current BPM and the fraction or multiple of the beat you’re set to – for instance, if you set this to 1/8, the effect chosen will modulate eight times a beat, but if you set it to 8/1, it’ll modulate or cycle every eight beats, or two bars. It goes up to eight bars. I won’t go through the echo, delay, flange, phaser, trans(form) or roll, as these are all pretty standard, but I will highlight a few of the other effects that are more deserving of explanation. Before I do though, just to say that it’s here you select send/return if you want to add an external effects unit (such as the Pioneer RMX-1000).

The beat effects section, showing the selector knob, and at the top right, the 'tap' button where you can manually enter a BPM for the effects to cycle to.
“Up echo” kid of has a rising resonance behind the echo as it fades away; “spiral” is similar but with some amplitude stuff going on too, and would sound particualary good with vocal snippets; “robot” is a bit like a bitcrusher; but actually my personal favourite here is “reverse roll”, which loops the audio like a normal roll, but as you’d guess, reverses it too – nice for building out of a break.
The “time” knob and “tap” buttons let you manually take over the effects cycle time if you want to break from it being tied to a beat or fraction of a beat, and the level/depth control obviously can knock out the original sound and leave only the effected sound at full-on, progressively re-introducing the source as you turn it to the left.
These are post-fader FX, which means if you cut the channel fader, your echoes (for instance) echo nicely on until they naturally decay. However, you can cut earlier than that if you have the crossfader engaged, as this overrides the post-fader behaviour. Thus it’s your choice.
Conclusion
As a replacement for that pretty much workaday club standard, the DJM-800, the DJM-850 ticks all the important boxes. Instantly familiar, but with future-proof touches (decent digital sound card, Traktor Scratch certification, forward-thinking effects; now, if only it would work with Serato Scratch Live too…), it both sounds good and has enough flexibility to work in most general pro DJing situations.
It’s a competent hardware mixer, with good general sound, fun and great-sounding effects, and that all-important plug-and-play Traktor compatibility
But as it is a “general” mixer, designed to do the job in a variety of situations, you could say that it has its weaknesses: Particularly, you have to look higher up the range for integration with other Pioneer gear via the Pro DJ Link, or the ability to play direct from Pioneer’s Rekordbox software direct from the mixer.
The crossfader is not going to win many friends among the hardcore scratch community. Personally, neither bothers me (I use DJ software, so have no need for Rekordbox, and I am not a pro scratch DJ), but these limitations will matter to some DJs.
Overall it’s a competent hardware mixer, with good general sound, fun and great-sounding effects, and that all-important plug-and-play Traktor compatibility. If I rolled up at any club and this was installed I’d be itching to get playing on it.

For Traktor Scratch users who don’t want Midi control over their software, but do want a decent hardware mixer with an integrated Traktor Scratch audio interface, this is a great choice
Maybe it’s good to end on a quick comparison between this and two other mixers in Pioneer’s range, the DJM-900nexus and the DJM-T1. The DJM-900nexus has a higher spec, with extra effects and the missing integration features present, but is otherwise quite similar.
The more basic (two channel, to start with) DJM-T1 would be a better choice if you want a mixer to use with Traktor Scratch and old-style turntables: It is more like a deck-less controller for Traktor as it has transport and loop/cue controls and controls for Traktor’s built-in effects right there on the control surface, negating the need to use your keyboard or a Traktor Kontrol X1 to unlock the most important features of the software, for instance. (By the way, it would be difficult to use the Midi mapping possiblities of the DJM-850 to meaningfully control DJ software, because you can’t turn “off” the audio functions.)
But for Traktor Scratch users who don’t want Midi control over their software, but do want a decent hardware mixer with an integrated Traktor Scratch audio interface, this is a great choice, especially if you can’t afford or don’t want the extra features of the DJM-900nexus, as the DJM-850 has nearly the same functionality but at a markedly lower price.
Video
Summary
We like:
- Excellent pro build quiality
- Traktor Scratch sound device means no need for a separate interface
- Forward-thinking and great sounding hardware effect options
- Instantly familiar club mixer layout
We don’t like:
- Crossfader not the best for scratching
Star ratings:
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Product details:
Size & weight: 12.6 x 4.3 x 15″ (320 x 108 x 381mm), 17lb (7.7kg)
Price: US$1449 / £1299 / €1608
Buy from: Amazon (US), Juno (UK), Juno (rest of Europe & world)
What do you think?
Do you DJ out and about on a Pioneer mixer? Have you got an older model, and if so, is this a good-looking upgrade for you? Would you consider having a Traktor home set-up with such a mixer at its heart? Please share your thoughts in the comments.
Now go to:
Review & Video: Traktor Pro 2.5 & Traktor Kontrol F1
Pioneer DDJ-ERGO-V Now Supports Algoriddim’s djay 4
Pioneer Officially Enters Traktor Market with the DDJ-T1 4-Deck Controller
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Tags: djm-850, mixers, pioneer
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.

I don’t know Phil, I’m starting to think you have no intentions of ever returning those 3900′s!
I looked at this closely when re-equipping my studio recently, but ended up going for the X1600 instead. It had a few extra features that worked better for me, and at two-thirds the cost, I haven’t regretted the decision.
[ link ]Phil how do you think it stacks up against A&H DB2? They are the same price but I’m not too sure how the cable outputs, soundcard & effects compare. Still saving for a mixer & I think it’s between these two but would value your guidance.
[ link ]Small error – I think €1,199 Should read £1,199
[ link ]Is there no rotary pot option?
[ link ]I currently use Traktor with an X1 and an Audio 10 soundcard for routing my deck channels to the mixer.
Am I correct in thinking that with this mixer I could just plug into a usb port on the mixer itself and have access to all the channels without the need for loads of phono cables?
:: ed
[ link ]You wouldn’t need the Audio 10 at all, just plug the laptop into the mixer.
[ link ]Two reasons why I will stay away from the 850, and the nexus900 as well:
[ link ]1.: As a club DJ, I never know what setup I’ll find on location, so I’d have to bring a proper traktor soundcard anyway. I have to own one – so I don’t need a mixer with a built-in traktor-certified audio interface.
2.: The pioneer premium on the price is still far too high for me personally. If I had a club, It would be among the top choices, because these things are reliable and sound good. But at home – no way, I’d never pay 1200 euros for a mixer/soundcard combo, especially if I have to own another soundcard anyway.
Just did a price search – it’s actually 1500 euros! Holy s#%?
[ link ]That’s not a “Pioneer premium,” it’s a “Quality descrete hardware” premium. $1500 is actually a pretty decent price for the amount of firepower that circuitry brings.
[ link ]Solid review, but I still can’t fathom why a person would buy a set of CDJs and a mixer just to use with Traktor. Especially given the price of the hardware, which the software solves, and the massive inconvenience of the software, which the hardware solves. I just can’t picture who would spend so much on a setup, only to be tied to a laptop and aggravating software.
[ link ]Traktor lets you do things CDJs don’t, and with such a set-up, you can use whatever you want, but on the same hardware.
[ link ]nice review! would it be too much to ask for you to make a comparison between this mixer and the xone db2? they are obviously competing with each other, booth at the same price range, booth have a 4 channel sound card etc, but would be cool to see what seperates them from another! i dont want do be a bother, but if had the time in the future it would really apreciate it!!
[ link ]Samuel
We’ve reviewed the DB2 as well, so you can read up our thoughts on that too: http://www.digitaldjtips.com/2012/04/review-video-allen-heath-xonedb2-dj-mixer/
[ link ]Wow this mixer has a lot of cool effects! I’m asking myself if I can create all this effects (like noise) in traktor too..
[ link ]For Mixing the real advantage of this mixer over the DJM-800 is that finally! Pioneer is delivering EQ kills instead of the weak -26dB max of the older model.
The odd news are that despite the excellent 32 bit DAC converters… this mixer degrades all CDJs sound quality by forcing and additional DAC-ADC conversion because this 2012 mixer eliminated the SPDIF direct digital inputs, so every CDJ(whatever brand or model) needs to use the RCA inputs route. Deceptive for many to say the least.
[ link ]DJM-800 had two SPDIF inputs, as DJM-900, DJM-1000 and even DJM-500 have.
Why DJM-850 hasn’t? and this on an allegedly future-proof mixer, when as the years pass by, the venues’ sound systems are starting to reveal subtle sonic differences…
On 2nd thought… haha maybe this detail will help to turn the sound-quality competition in favor of Digital DJs who plug into a DJM-850 a really top notch quality sound, just after/before a CDJing DJ.
[ link ]Three questions Phil..
1. Did you find that the effects from the DJM sounded better than the Traktor effects ? This has been an on-going topic of discussion between both advocates.
2. Do the beat effects quantise automatically with the BPM of the track or do you have to adjust it manually ?
3. With the set up you mentioned above how did you perform the transport functions of Traktor ?
[ link ]1. They’re excellent
[ link ]2. Yes
3. I used an X1
How do i set this up? Macbookpro + traktor 2.5 + 2 cdjs 400(they are midi controllers) + DJM 850 +X1 ( to do this hot cues + loops…). I want to beatchmatch using the cdjs and select tracks from traktor using the cdjs knobs but also want to use hot cues and loops from x1 . I will plug the djm 850 on 1 usb port and the X1 on the other usb port? Or i will need a HUB to plug everything?
[ link ]Hi there, i’ve a question about my DJM 900 using with Traktoe Scratch 2.5 with one X1.
[ link ]The seller of the DJM 900 told me that the faderstart should works in Traktor Scratch 2.5. But i can’t fix this!!!!. Is there anybody who can tell how to setup the faderstart working on the DJM 900 in Traktor Scratch 2.5
I’ve already put the faderstart function on “ON” under the utility button on the DJM 900,. and selected the buttons 1,2,3,4 for faderstart on the leftside on the DJM 900.
Must I also selected something in Traktor Scratch self.
Please can someone help me with problem.
Thank you.
With the best regards from the Netherlands.
Gijs.
Hey i have a problem maybe you Phill or anybody.
So i wanna link my friends x2 pioneer 2000s up to my laptop and controll traktor , So fine. My problem is can i link the Djm 850 to the laptop and link ALL 4 Decks up from traktor Pro to the MIxer whilst still controlling with the pioneer 2000′s .
OR even better. Have 2 separate sound cards on the pioneers into the mixer for Deck A and B , But for deck C and D On the Mixers soundcard. Havnt tried as my friend has the decks not me.
[ link ]Hi guys!
I’m thinking of buying the djm-850 wo use with 2 denon sc-2000 and traktor pro (will have 4 deck capability).
The question I have is can I midi map the 4 starter buttons to let say 4 different sorting (key, bpm, artist, title) for example…since I won’t use cdjs
If yes, that might be my perfect setup (a djm-850 + 2x sc2000 and in the future 1 turntable and 1 cd player)
[ link ]No rotary option. FAIL.
[ link ]For that price you’d think they’d be nice to their loyal customers and make a rotary option available, or better yet make a new version that allows for rapid swapping.
[ link ]