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Streaming with OBS + DDJ-SB3 using Serato (Mac)

This guide is a how-to for streaming using a 3rd party software such as OBS, and many of these instructions may also be applied to other software.

The instructions provided herein are based around a DDJ-SB3, and may be different for other DDJ units. Please check the DDJ section of the Knowledge Base for additional tutorials.

Please note that Apple made changes to Catalina (macOS 10.15) to restrict the use of 32bit applications. If you are on an older OS, you may find other instructions to use free applications such as JACK and Soundflower, but those  options will not work with Catalina.

Important: There is NO mic output from the DDJ-SB3 to your broadcast, this is because the audio from the mic is not routed into the software; there is no audio input on the DDJ-SB3, only an output - the mic is direct-to-master hardware only. If you want to use a mic, connect one directly to your computer or use the built-in mic, and add a second Audio Input Capture device for it in Step 3 below.

 

Step 1 - Update

Ensure that you are running the latest version of rekordbox, that your drivers and firmware are up-to-date, and that your broadcast software is current as well.

Step 2 - Download the Necessary Software

There is just one extra tool necessary for us Mac users:

You can also use Sound Siphon, which is a very similar application and a few bucks cheaper. I've had Loopback for years (very worth the cost) and haven't used Sound Siphon myself, but from what I understand, you can follow along pretty closely to configure it as we do for Loopback below.

 

Step 3 - Configure Loopback

First, connect and your DDJ-SB3 via USB, then open Serato DJ (Lite or Pro), and minimize it.

Next, launch Loopback and click New Virtual Device at the bottom left, then name it SDJ2OBS:

OBS-SDJ2OBS.pngClick on the Pass-Thru source device and delete it. Click the + icon beside Sources and click the running Serato DJ application:

OBS-Serato.png

Next, click the Options drop-down on the Serato DJ item and un-check the Mute when capturing box:

OBS-Serato-Unmute.png

Step 4 - Configure OBS for Audio

Download and install OBS if you haven't already, then launch it.

Click the + button at the bottom of the Sources window to add a new Audio Input Capture source:

DDJ-1000-OBS-Input.png

You can keep the defaults, click OK.

Select SDJ2OBS from the Device drop-down.

Click OK.

With audio playing on a deck in rekordbox, you will now see activity on the meters in the Audio Mixer section of OBS:

DDJ-1000-OBS-Mixer.png

You may notice the levels are a bit low, and don't change when you adjust the Master level knob on the DDJ-SB3 - this is normal! The recording output is taken from the software, so it's not affected by the master volume knob. I recommend adjusting the channel Trim knobs so the DDJ-SB3 channel meters are peaking around the first orange LED. Click the gear icon below the Audio Input Capture in the Audio Mixer of OBS (pictured above), and click Advanced Audio Properties.

Adjust the Volume to 6.0dB (or as needed to get the single track peak levels just dipping into the red):

DDJ-1000-OBS-Advanced.png

If you want to also have the audio come out of your computer's speakers, change Audio Monitoring to Monitor and Output. This is only necessary if you don't have speakers connected to your DDJ-SB3 master out already; the device for this is set in the preferences below.

Click Close.

Next, open Settings to configure a few things...

If you want to record the stream from within OBS, click General at the left and tick the box beside Automatically record when streaming in the Output box.

Click Stream at the left to select your output stream destination from the Service dropdown, then click the Stream Key (Link) linked text to open the corresponding website's streaming info page:

DDJ-1000-OBS-Stream.png

Go through their setup process or other instructions and copy/paste your key into the field above.

Click Output at the left and check that the Output Mode is set to Advanced:

DDJ-1000-OBS-Streaming.png

If you want to go to a higher quality stream, uncheck the Enforce streaming service encoder settings box, otherwise, skip this and the next part. Click the Audio tab and adjust the Audio Bitrate:

DDJ-1000-OBS-Audio.png

How high you go depends on the quality of your internet connection and the capacity for the server you're streaming to.

Finally, click Audio at the left - change the Monitoring Device if desired (per above).

If you're only streaming audio, you can skip ahead to Step 6.

Step 5 - Configure OBS for Video

If you want to stream a capture of your screen or video input (or both) you can add these as well.

Click the + button at the bottom of the Sources window to add a new Display Capture source:

DDJ-1000-OBS-Video.png

You can keep the defaults and click OK.If you have multiple displays, select the output display you want to use. 

DDJ-1000-OBS-Display.png

Click OK.

Please note, as an alternative to Display Capture, you may try using the Window Capture function. Whether this works depends on the graphics chipset(s) you have in your Mac. If you find the Window Capture freezes OBS or does not show your waveforms within rekordbox, then use the Display Capture.

If you are showing the rekordbox output, as opposed to a video input source, you should match your input size. Open Settings > Video and change the Base (Canvas) size to match the resolution of your display.

DDJ-1000-OBS-Display-Settings.png

The Output (Scaled) size should typically be 720 or 1080 to keep a down-sampled resolution that is friendly for your broadcast.

Click OK.

You can also (optionally) add a webcam or other video input and configure it here. If you require further instruction on this, try Google.

Step 6 - Broadcast

Click Start Streaming and that's pretty much it! Start playing some tunes, and if you've enabled your webcam - smile!

Step 7 - Tweak

You should test and monitor the workload and buffer on your computer as you perform - chances are the CPU usage won't be the issue, but the audio buffer may still run out. As you increase the buffer, the latency (delay between action and audio output) will increase, but the likelihood of audio dropouts or crackling will decrease. Your computer's age will typically mean larger buffer sizes are required, but there are tricks you can do to reduce background application usage and improve the overall performance of your Mac.

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This guide was made using the following software versions:

  • macOS Catalina v10.15.4
  • Serato DJ Pro 2.3.3
  • Loopback 2.1.4
  • OBS Studio v24.0.6 

While efforts will be made to keep up with any changes to this process to ensure others can use it after software update have been released, we can't guarantee the accuracy or relevance of this information, nor the performance of any 3rd party software applications.

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