Tap the customization tab at the top left of the screen.
Sources are the absolute foundational building blocks of the WING's audio grid. A Source represents a physical input or a digital stream, combined with its operational metadata. When you configure a Source, you are defining:
One of the WING's most powerful "patched" features is the library: behringer wing library patched
[ WING LIBRARY SYSTEM ] ├── SHOWS (Master Files: Routing, Snapshots, Libraries) ├── SNAPSHOTS (Global Console States) ├── THEATRE CUES (Sequential Performance Steps) └── PRESETS (Individual Channel / FX Component Data)
What are you patching (e.g., stage boxes, personal monitors, or a DAW)? Tap the customization tab at the top left of the screen
If you’re a touring engineer carrying a Wing as FOH or monitors, you need a repeatable patching workflow:
Your (Live sound, studio tracking, theater, house of worship). How many independent monitor mixes you need to patch. When you configure a Source, you are defining:
The library system on the WING is a sophisticated suite of tools designed to manage the vast amount of data a modern digital console handles. It's the brain behind storing everything from a single channel's EQ curve to the complete state of the entire mixer. Understanding its components is key to leveraging the "patches" that have refined it.
The phrase might sound technical, but it’s simply the console telling you that all your presets, effects, and snapshots have been successfully linked to active processing. A fully patched library means no surprises during a live show—no silent FX returns, no missing compressor models, and no last-minute scrambles.
: Allows you to take signals from any channel or direct input and patch them elsewhere pre-fader and pre-gain.
To understand a "library patched" configuration, you must understand how the WING handles data isolation. The console divides its library into distinct granular categories: