Skip to main content

A few questions about Recording Level

Your Avatar
Submitted by anonymous on

Im a noob at this. But I have a Fostex VF-160 16 Track Recorder, and I was wondering when recording what should my general recording level be (in Db)? Should I get it as loud as I can without clipping it or is there a trick. When I try to record I always have the problum of how loud I should turn up my effects modeler compared to how loud I have the Inputs on the Recorder. Please help me thanks!



And is there a diffrence in recording levels for guitars and vocals?

Comments

Your Avatar
hueseph

It would make sense to leave

your trim pot at a 0 level. If there is a detente leave it there. So that the

line is neither attenuating nor boosting the signal from your modeler. From

there you can raise the level coming from your modeler 'til you get as loud a

signal as possible without clipping. You can always turn down the fader after

you've tracked the part at a decent level, but if you recorded at a poor level,

all you will be doing is boosting noise. In regards to vocals as opposed to

axe: treat them in the same manner initially. You may want to compress your vox

to disc. Once it's all tracked you can change the levels as you please during

mixdown.

Thu, 10/26/2006 - 16:21 Permalink
Your Avatar
Massive Mastering

Buckethead wrote: Im a noob at this. But I have a Fostex VF-160 16 Track Recorder, and I was wondering when recording what should my general recording level be (in Db)?? Should I get it as loud as I can without clipping it or is there a trick. When I try to record I always have the problum of how loud I should turn up my effects modeler compared to how loud I have the Inputs on the Recorder. Please help me thanks!



And is there a diffrence in recording levels for guitars and vocals??

Really quick answer - You want to run your preamps around 0dBVU. Depending on the converters, that's going to hover around -18dBFS or so. Peaks will go higher - A snare whacked crazy might hit -10dBFS or so, but will generally come in a little more "normal."

Thu, 10/26/2006 - 21:42 Permalink