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If I use 2 mic's on guitar. One SM57 up close and a LDC about 3 feet away. Should I.
A) Put on a set out head phones and listen to where the signal gets louder or weaker (but moving the mic around)
B) Just start using the phase reverse button and always use one mic out of phase

Comments

anonymous Tue, 03/15/2005 - 06:51

Definitely not choice B. A spaced pair wiill phase cancel but only at a frequency that is relative to the distance the mikes are from each other. Flipping the phase will put all the frequencies out of phase.
Choice a is the one to go, pan both mikes to the same point and listen. You can also try manually lining up the track that is 3 feet away with the close mic inside your daw after you record. This removes the distance (time) related phase issues and can sound pretty neat. I sometimes do this with the close drum overheads as it seems to make cymbal decay sweeter, i.e. I move the overhead tracks back in time to line up with the impulse from the snare.

sproll Fri, 03/18/2005 - 07:41

Yup, use your ears.

It's pretty easy to hear with mono summed parts in headphones. If you play guitar, it sounds almost identical to (surprise) a phaser pedal. Audition one mic by itself, then add in the second one. If when you add in the second one, it gives that phaser pedal type sound (gets washy and loses the bottom end) you have a phase problem and need to move the mic.

Hope this helps!

Tom