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Hi everyone, I'm new to the world of recording and i need your help

Let me first tell what and why I'm recording. Im a drummer and I'm in a couple of litte bands. I need to be able to record my drums for use in pro tools where most of my band's work will be done. my guitarist has an m box and a Behringer condenser that we've been using to capture the whole band. i want to be able to record my own drum parts so when i think of something, i can have it recorded before our next practice. i just went on the musiciansfriend today and i saw what looks like a killer deal
M box with pro tools and reason for $449 and it includes these 2 microphones
AT2020 Large Diaphragm Cardioid Condenser Microphone
MXLV63M Condenser Studio Microphone
is this a good deal for what i want to do?

second question
I have 2 Nakamichi Sp80 subwoofers that I'm never going to use. i know that Yamaha has the subkick which is a subwoofer that they turned into a microphone. is it possible to turn these 2 or even one of these subs into a bass drum microphone? and if it is, how would i do it?
here are some pictures sorry about the poor quality on some of them


thanks so much everyone

Comments

anonymous Tue, 07/19/2005 - 16:26

I have this on my list of things to do 'one day' as I have a 15" Celestian speaker a client gave me when he couldn't pay all his studio bill and I considered turning it into a 'microphone' As far as I know and I haven't done much research you just chop one end off a guitar lead and connect to the 2 connections on the speaker and then use a DI box as you would when DI'ing guitar or bass. The tiny little bit of knowledge I have makes me think it's as simple as that. I believe The Beatles 'The most overatted bunch of useless, annoying wan***s in history IMHO' used to record Mc Cartneys bass partly with another bass cab and a few producers also use this technique on bass cabs and bass drum, read a few articles but shocking with names.

Kev Tue, 07/19/2005 - 22:10

XL3 female ... mic quality cable ... XL3 male

that's a typical mic cable.

remove the female connector and use the two centre conductors for the + and - terminals of the speaker.
Try the sheild on the chassis of the speaker if your like but I'd leave it to start with.

Reversing the polarity of the leads will reverse the phase ... experiment.