Behringer Wing Library Repack

A library repack is a user-organized archive containing hundreds or thousands of preset files designed to be imported into the WING. These repacks often aggregate content from multiple sources:

Some repacks also include unofficial sound libraries like WAV files imported into the WING’s built-in stereo recorder/player or USB media player slots, though the WING is not a sampler workstation.


The Behringer WING digital mixing console offers extensive user customization, particularly through its flexible library system for snippets, presets, show files, and sample playback. However, as users accumulate data, these libraries often become fragmented, leading to inefficiencies in live sound and studio environments. This paper examines the concept of the “Library Repack”—a systematic reorganization of the WING’s internal and external data structures. It outlines the benefits of repacking, the step-by-step methodology using the WING’s built-in tools and WING-Co-Pilot software, and critical technical considerations such as firmware compatibility and USB drive formatting. The findings suggest that a biennial repack reduces load times, prevents preset duplication, and enhances creative workflow. behringer wing library repack


Instead of trusting a random “repack,” most professionals:


The Wing has generous storage, but it is not infinite. If you frequently import third-party IR files (for the Fx-Rack) or user samples for the looper, you will eventually hit a wall. A repack consolidates duplicates. A library repack is a user-organized archive containing

WING has 8 FX slots. A repack includes presets per FX engine:


Organized by instrument/source type:

Each preset should include:


A library repack is a curated collection of show files, snippets, channel presets, FX presets, and user samples reorganized from the factory library or from multiple sources into a more logical, usable structure for the WING mixer. Some repacks also include unofficial sound libraries like

The stock library is functional but often:

A repack fixes that.