Behringer WING
Behringer WING Stage Plot Guide for Live Sound Setups
Plan a Behringer WING stage plot with Stageplot Pro. WING channel names are set live over OSC only, so there is no safe file export to promise you yet.
About the WING
The Behringer WING is a newer console than the X32, with a larger touch surface, more per-channel processing, and a strong following among touring engineers and production companies upgrading from X32 rigs. It is increasingly common on mid-size touring stages.
Current export status, honestly
Stageplot Pro does not export a WING scene file today, and this is a
deliberate call, not a gap we simply have not gotten to. The WING's
.snap scene file is a single, full-console JSON dump covering every
parameter on the desk, not a small, vendor-published file for just channel
names. Channel name, color, and phantom power ARE settable on a WING, but
only live, over OSC (a real-time network control protocol), while the
console is connected. There is no safe, partial "names only" file to
generate ahead of time.
Hand-building a fake full-console .snap file to smuggle in just the
names would risk loading a malformed whole-console snapshot at a real
show, overwriting settings that have nothing to do with your stage plot.
We will not ship that. A live OSC push is a realistic future feature, but
it is a different kind of integration than the file exports Stageplot Pro
offers today, and we are not putting a date on it.
This is worth understanding because it is not unique to us. Any tool claiming a WING "import file" for names alone is either working around the same full-snapshot risk in a way we consider unsafe, or pushing live over OSC in real time, not generating something ahead of the show the way an X32 .scn export does.
What actually works today
- Build your complete stage plot and input list in the editor.
- Export a clean, watermark-free PDF, or share the plot link directly.
- Send it to your engineer ahead of the show. A WING session builds fast by hand from an accurate list, since the desk's channel strip assignment workflow is quick once the engineer knows what is coming.
Our working with sound engineers guide has practical tips for making sure that handoff actually gets read before you arrive, not just forwarded and forgotten.
Common WING stage plot setups
WING consoles turn up often on electronic and hybrid acts running larger channel counts with tracks or synths alongside live instruments. The electronic live duo stage plot and dj with live percussion stage plot templates are a solid starting point for that kind of rig.
What a good handoff looks like on a WING rig
Because WING sessions carry more per-channel processing than an X32, a touring engineer building from scratch benefits most from a plot that nails down mic type, phantom needs, and monitor mix assignment per position up front, so the strip layout and OSC-driven naming pass goes fast once the desk is powered on at load in.
Try it
Open the editor and build a stage plot and input list ready to hand to your WING engineer today.