hi Guys from the forum,
I have a problem. I just bought two m-audio dmp3 preamps, both from completely different places. When I first tested one of them I was sure there was a technical problem or a manufacturing defect since when I tested it with my Behringer B1 in my budget studio there was a huge booming sound and hardly any highs, even when I turned on the low cut. After I thought I would never get it fixed and resigned to buying a new one, I discovered that both of them had the same problem, whether in my budget studio or here in my home studio ( totally different acoustic spaces) I checked with my Behringer B1 with the phantom power on and with my Shure SM58 with both the power on and off. Could it be I'm doing something wrong? I would presume this preamp sucks but I have a Behringer mic200 which costs one third what this one costs and the sound is way better. I'm really getting nothing but boominess, it's awful. I hope you guys can help me cause I can't afford to buy a new preamp for a while.
João
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Here it is: a sample recorded in 24 bit 96khz wav with the dmp3
Here it is: a sample recorded in 24 bit 96khz wav with the dmp3 and a behringer b1 condenser a few inches from the twelfth fret of my acoustic steel string guitar.
[="http://soundcloud.c…"]http://soundcloud.c…
h[/]ope you guys can figure out what went wrong...
Yep, that sounds fine within the limits of what a B1 microphone
Yep, that sounds fine within the limits of what a B1 microphone can do. You might want to experiment with re-positioning the microphone relative to the guitar. There is some acoustic boom coming from the sound hole, but this is not an equipment problem.
In what way does the MIC200 pre-amp sound "way better"?
What are you connecting the output of the DMP3 to and with what
What are you connecting the output of the DMP3 to and with what type of cable?