I asked this on another board, but since I didn't get any responses, I'll try here.
I'm kind of in the middle of building myself an overly complicated guitar rig, and one of the things I'm doing is getting all my time based effects after my amps. I've tried adding effects loops, and they didn't do it for me - it just sounded kind of sterile to me. So, I'm going this rout. It has the advantage of letting me run the choruses, delays, etc. in stereo. This all returns to an little stereo solid state amp and a couple extra speakers. Kind of fussy, not particularly practical, but I'm having fun, which is all I'm really worried about.
SO, one of the things I want to do is run those time based effects in parallel, which means I need a line mixer. I've looked up a couple designs on the internet, and talked to a few people about it, but what I'm not entirely clear on is how many input stages I can comfortably sum into a single summing amp. I had one friend tell me four, but he was specifically talking about a tube summing amp (which he made for Motown records about 50 years ago!). He felt an op amp (which is what I'm using) might do more, but he had never built one. I've seen other people say eight is fine, and since I want eight stereo inputs that is what I would prefer, as I could do the whole thing with 9 dual op-amps (eight for the inputs, and 1 for summing), instead of 11 (eight for inputs, two for sub-summing, and one for the final summing). Op-amps are expensive enough for this to matter a bit (to me - I'm poor!), but also it saves space and a bit of noise, and that is useful for me.
So, any opinions on the matter?
I'm also trying to decide if the noise penalty of leaving the inputs open all the time will be problematic, or if I should switch the line amp inputs on and off. The sends to the effects will of course be switched, and most of the effects are pretty quiet, so if the op-amps are reasonably quiet it shouldn't be a problem, right? I will only really know once I've tried it, but if anyone has any past experience I'd like to hear it.
Gabriel