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I'm looking to widen my palette of mics and buy a single 'transparent' preamp of decent quality and value.

Here's my current setup:

Preamps: ART MPA Gold Digital, Yamaha 01V96
Mics: ADK Hamburg, RODE s NT1a, various Audix OM-7, OM-6, OM-3s, SM57
Music: Rock, Celtic-Bluegrass fusion, Contemporary Christian & 9-singer vocalist group.
Potential mic Use: Vocals, acoustic guitar, congas, whistle, fiddle, bazooki, digiredoo(sp), guitar and bass amp micing, occasional acoustic piano

My budget is about US$2000 for new mics

Criteria
* acquire a set of mics that each sound different,
* will work on the above instruments and vocals.
* nice if mic was rugged enough to use on stage to record a live gig.

Here's the mic list I am thinking of. I already owned the x'd mics

[x]ADK Hamburg
[x]RODE NT1a
[x]Audix OM7, OM6, OM3
[x]SM57
[ ]AT2020
[ ]AT4050 (pattern control)
[ ]Node NTK
[ ]Shure SM81-LC
[ ]Audix i5

I would appreciate any suggestions like 'those 2 sound very similar', or 'have a look at this mic as an alternative to abc'...

Regarding a new preamp, I'd like one or two channels of something uncolored and of enough quality to let me really hear the mics. I'd like to keep the price around/under US$1K-1.5K for the preamp. (FWIW I also plan to purchase a Mackie 800R (ADAT Out) to front end my live recording rig and I can use that in the studio as well. The 1-1.5K budget figure is on top of the Mackie.)

* Either a channel strip or a straight gain device would be OK.
* I like the concept of some dynamics amd EQ but don't want to give up too much quality.
* prefer a 1U rack mount preamp due to how my studio is laid out and my workflow
* nice if the preamp had an output that I could put unbalanced into the inserts on my 01V96 without adding more 'crap' to the signal path
* 120V, oh how I hate wall warts (yeah, I understand the design tradeoffs)

Preamp ideas
Drawmer MX60
Grace 101
?

Thanks,

Topic Tags

Comments

Boswell Thu, 07/05/2007 - 02:50

I suggest trying DAV BG1s as outstanding transparent preamps that fall within your budget. When I have to use an 01V96, I drive the BG1 outputs into balun transformers to feed the 01V96 insert returns. The +24dBFS spec on both is a good match and gives excellent headroom.

Don't overlook a pair of Rode NT-2As as versatile LDCs that can be set up X-Y, M-S, A-B or as individual vocal/guitar mics.

Cucco Thu, 07/05/2007 - 06:33

Another device to consider -
Summitt 2BA-221 (a pair of them with the rack mount).

It meets your 1U requirement, plus it can go from super transparent to VERY tubey with different gain structures.

Add to that, it has an unbalanced output (albeit, I believe it's before the tube stage) which will help with your 01V96.

Cucco Thu, 07/05/2007 - 11:32

Mick sells them direct only. His prices include shipping but not customs/duty.

Trust me - get ahold of one and you won't want to return it. If for some reason you don't like it, put it on Ebay, you'll get at least 90% of your purchase price on it. (or hit me up - if it's at the right time, I may be able to swing the $$ for it!.)

J.

anonymous Fri, 07/06/2007 - 00:58

Davedog wrote: If I understand correctly, you have a 2K mic budget and a 1K-1.5K budget for the preamp.

Lets flip that and go with a Presonus ADL600 for the pre and two AT4050's for the mics. Keep the change for something else.

From what I've read the ADL is moderately colored. Can it run more transparent at lower gains? Do you just think it's a great preamp everyone should have?

Davedog Fri, 07/06/2007 - 09:15

Yeah, it can add color to the track....Its the kind of color thats really big and sweet. I wish I had spent more time with it to truly answer your question about transparency. I will say that it never got in the way of the few tracks I used it on. I used an older U87, an AT4033, and a Russian Oktava MK319 through it as well as a bass through the DI. All were sparkling clear and right upfront with very little manipulation.

Yeah...its on my short list of 'things to own'...............

Its a way different beasty than the Summit and the DAV.

Cucco Fri, 07/06/2007 - 11:46

Davedog wrote: Its a way different beasty than the Summit and the DAV.

That's the truth!!

The DAV is solid state OpAmp to the max (clean as hell with just a touch of warmth). The Summitt is "hybrid" with a tube in the gain stage (IIRC) or at least one of the gain stages. The ADL600 is all tube - tube input, tube output.

Please realize though that all tube does not mean:
*Warm
*Dark
*Fuzzy
*Colored

These are terms which some piss-poor marketing idiots came up with (and some mal-informed reviewers) to describe gear that they have no clue about!

A good tube preamp (whether it be a microphone amplifier stage or a true stereo preamp) should be as clean as a nun's criminal record unless it's designed poorly or intentionally overdriven.

In fact, the adjectives that SHOULD be used with this type of gear is:
*Big
*Open
*Revealing
since tube gear usually excells at broad bandwidth amplification under good conditions (good temperature, not TOO much or TOO little voltage, etc.)

Transformer based gear should have the reputation as "colored" gear. I'd say a good xfrmer based preamp should be as clean as a congressman's criminal record...

Bad transformer gear just sounds like sh*t. That is to say poorly wound, cheap transformers which do not maintain their linearity across a broad frequency spectrum.

In the case of the Langevin, they (Manley) uses large, hand-wound and hand-tested transformers and they too sound friggin huge!

When you get into this kind of money for a preamp, you have plenty to choose from. Don't fall victim to poor marketing schemes though - at this price point, you shouldn't have to. The kinds of pres being recommended here are all of the caliber that:
1 - you more or less can't go wrong
2 - if you want answers about their design, you can actually call and talk to a human at the company who makes it (often the actual designer or builder) and find out the kinds of answers we just can't give you here.

Good luck,

J.

anonymous Fri, 07/06/2007 - 12:25

Davedog and Cucco, thanks for being extremely patient and helpful. I'll study up some more on your recomendations. I've got 3 more weeks until my annual shoppping spree to the USA.

The non-linearity problem makes me wonder - I just got a garage sale 1970's vintage guitar amp back from the shop yesterday and they rewound the output transformer (that's fed by 4 6L6GC's). The amp now blooms on certain notes, about 6db up from notes 1.5 steps away... (to their credit, it didn't work at all when I bought it and brought it in) But that's another topic, don't want to hijack my own thread :)

anonymous Sat, 07/07/2007 - 10:46

So I have recomendations for the AT4050 and Rode NT2A, about a $150 price difference with shockmounts per mic.

Here's a loaded question - is it worth the extra $300 for a pair of the AT4050's? Perhaps a better question is how you would characterize the differences between these 2 mics.

My Rode NT1A has been a litttle flakey since the day I bought it (intermittant short, I think in the IC chip inside the mic) and after a year their tech support never returned my email so I am a little down on Rode. I need to scrape off the darn epoxy they put on these boards and seeif it is a cold solder joint.

CoyoteTrax Thu, 07/12/2007 - 11:27

I'm a little late jumping in here but wanted to add the GT SuPre to the mix here. While the SuPre is not my favorite pre it would me your requirements on price range and transparency. It's got a huge sound with gobs of headroom but remains very transparent IMO. Good quality pre.

I'll 2nd Cucco's recommend on the 4050's. It's hard to beat AT mics for clean response on acoustic instruments and there's virtually no self-noise. Watch your upper mids on percussion effects though, they can get a little brittle.

Boswell Thu, 07/12/2007 - 14:35

AudioGaff wrote:

Can anyone recommend a particular transformer or similar device so I can feed the balanced out of the Summit into the inserts on my 01V96?

Line level shifter from Ebtech and some cables.

http://www.ebtechaudio.com/products.html

Those won't work in this application because you need to retain the +4dBu level, not convert to -10dBV. At a pinch you could use two channels of LLS by jumpering two -10dBV jacks together and going in and out of the +4dBu jacks, but you may start noticing some signal quality degradation.

You should try to use single high-quality interstage transformers, or better, specific balun transformers. The impedances are not critical, but the turns ratios are. You need 1+1:2, i.e. a centre-tapped primary and the same total turns on the secondary. Impedances can be 600 Ohm to about 5KOhm.

Beware that the peak signal level is around +24dBu, so you need transformers that can handle those levels. You have to wire the transformer secondary to the ring and sleeve of a TRS jack to feed the 01V96 inserts, leaving the jack tip open circuit (it carries the 01V96 pre-amp output).

anonymous Fri, 07/13/2007 - 01:04

from page 286 of the manual:
http://www2.yamaha.co.jp/manual/pdf/pa/english/mixers/01V96V2E1.pdf
01V96 CH INSERT IN
0 db is .775 VRMS

Actual load impedance: 10k Ω

For us with nominal: 600 Ω Lines

Semsitivity: –12 dB
(195 mV)

Nominal imput level: –2 dB
(616 mV)

Max imput before clip: +18 dB
(6.16 V)

Phone jack (TRS)
(Unbalanced)

Output is the same, except impedances are switched. There is also a level block diagram on page 326, which if I am reading correctly, reinforces that the inserts at -2 dBu nominal and a max of +18 dBu.

So if
-7.8dBu is -10dBV
-2 dBu is -4.2 dBV
+4dBU is 1.78 dBV

It looks like the inserts are 'stuck in the middle' :)

Boswell Fri, 07/13/2007 - 02:54

AudioGaff wrote: Boswell, if the 01V96 has unbalanced -10dBV inserts as I would expect, the LLS should work. I've used one for unbalanced inserts to a balanced device such as compressor and back. One channel of the LLS for insert send and one for return.

Yes, I would think that would work OK if you are careful about the levels, since the 01V96 has -2dBu inserts, as mmcfarlane points out. I have only used an LLS for a genuine +4dBu balanced to -10dBV unbalanced conversion for a minidisc recording. Before trying that for the first time, I measured the LLS using a TFA and found the expected 4:1 ratio in amplitude, but also some peakiness in the higher frequencies that could be smoothed out a little by resistive loading. What I didn't think of checking was distortion levels at high amplitudes, so I don't know what you get when you use levels above the nominal + headroom.

anonymous Fri, 07/13/2007 - 08:34

Boswell wrote: ... Before trying that for the first time, I measured the LLS using a TFA and found the expected 4:1 ratio in amplitude, but also some peakiness in the higher frequencies that could be smoothed out a little by resistive loading. What I didn't think of checking was distortion levels at high amplitudes, so I don't know what you get when you use levels above the nominal + headroom.

Well, it would be a pity to spend $100 for a device that introduces high-frequency spikes.

Maybe just using the line ins, which run through the 01V96 preamps wont be that bad.

I sent an email to Summitt to see what their recommendation is.

An Apogee Ensemble is looking better and better...

Boswell Fri, 07/13/2007 - 10:12

mmcfarlane wrote: Well, it would be a pity to spend $100 for a device that introduces high-frequency spikes.

Maybe just using the line ins, which run through the 01V96 preamps wont be that bad.

No, don't get me wrong, these were not spikes. It's just that the frequency response curve was not perfectly flat. It's many years ago now, so I don't recall all of the details, but I do remember thinking that there was probably some self-resonance going on in the transformer. I tried various resistive loads, and that flattened things out, but also reduced the amplitude. I think that using the LLS into the insert returns should still give you a better sound than the 01V96 inputs at line level (20dB pad engaged). What do you want the dominant character of the sound to be: the Summit preamp or the 01V96 preamps?

My reading of the rather sparse 2BA-221 technical information on the Summit web site is that you can get at the unbalanced solid state preamp output at either the insert socket or at -10dBV on the rear panel Stack output (inverted polarity). From either of these outputs you would not need to go balanced to unbalanced. However, I guess you want the option of using the tube output stage, and that output is available in balanced form on the XLR or at -10dBV on a TRS jack.

I wondered to myself whether this was from an output transformer that could be connected balanced or unbalanced. Bingo! Here is a clue on their FAQ page: When using the XLR +4dB tube output, use a balanced cable. If you need to use it unbalanced, float the low instead of tying pin 3 to ground. So, no need for LLSs, you can wire the XLR output to be unbalanced. You will need a 2:1 resistive divider to get the levels about right for the 01V96 insert return, or else run the preamp at 6dB less gain than you otherwise would. Maybe you could even use just pin 1 and pin 3 for half the output. See what the response is from Summit.

anonymous Sat, 07/14/2007 - 01:36

Here's my (second) response from Summitt.

Hi Mark, I hadn't looked at the block diagram, but when I did it looks like channels 13-14 are made for a line level input. It goes straight to the buffers as far as I can see here.

Otherwise you can use the insert on any channels, that bypasses the mic pre but it is unbalanced so make sure you plug the 2BA-221's into the same power supply as the mixer to avoid ground loops.

There are both +4 dB (on XLR) and -10 dB (on TRS) tube outputs on the 2BA-221 so no problem getting a useable level, as long as you can bypass those Yamaha preamps you don't like! The stacking out and the insert are solid state.

You may be able to use the effect returns as well, with the -10 dB outputs. Again, use the same power supply as it's unbalanced

Actually I think he misread the block diagram, the inserts on 13-16 go through their own amp with adjustable gain. Anyway, I think I'll try one without a transformer or line balancer.

His response did raise one question though, he suggested using the same AC power source because I wasn't using the balanced outputs. This caused me some confusion because I thought balancing was for noise rejection picked up on the cable run and I thought ground loops would be the same whether balanced or unbalanced. Maybe they have a ground lift on the balanced outs and he gave a in complete answer, or maybe my understanding of ground loops is incomplete.

Boswell Sat, 07/14/2007 - 15:12

Looks like he missed the possibility of floating the XLR outs. Doing this would eliminate any ground loop effects at the same time as producing the unbalanced output that you need.

I would try a cable wired with an XLR socket on one end and a TRS jack plug on the other. Wire XLR pin 2 to TRS ring and XLR pin 1 to TRS sleeve. Leave both XLR pin 3 and TRS tip open circuit. Wire (clamp) the cable screen to the XLR shell. When used between the Summit XLR outputs and the 01V96 insert jack, this cable should give you a -2dBu single-ended unbalanced signal.

anonymous Sun, 07/15/2007 - 08:16

Thanks Boswell, that's how I'll do it. It'll be Early September before I return from vacation with my new gear but I'll report the results.

As a learning experience I'll try to compare what the 01V96 preamps do in comparison to using the inserts points. I think I can figure out a way to route the 01V96 pink noise generator without having a feedback loop to test both setups.

anonymous Sun, 09/09/2007 - 08:10

mmcfarlane wrote: Thanks Boswell, that's how I'll do it. It'll be Early September before I return from vacation with my new gear but I'll report the results....

Thanks again to everyone for your help.

I ended up with 2 channels of the Summitt 2BA-221, a channel of Joe Meek for fun, a free Joe Meek mic, 2 Shure SM81C's and an AT4050. I'll be trying them out this weekend on acoustic guitar and vocals (solo act).

anonymous Tue, 09/11/2007 - 10:10

My first impressions on the Summit 2BA-221:

I wish it had a switch for the post-tube 1/4" TRS out to select +4/-10 levels. This would allow me to cable in 1/4" and easily select pre/post-tube by swapping jacks on the back. A minor nag, I'll probably never use the pre-tube output. I actually made a 1/4" cable first thinking I would test this but wasn't happy with the output levels so I changed to XLR.

(Remember, the 2BA-221 is going unbalanced to the insert points on a Yamaha 01V96R2 mixer and then via firewire into Cubase.)

The only thing I really tested so far is the "instrument in" using an active/passive Warwick 5 bass with customized electronics and pickups - my main axe. I gotta say the detail on the instrument-in is excelent, and quiet enough till I push the tube past 3 oclock. I wish I could get a little more growly tube distortion but alas I couldn't figure out how to with any mixture of solid state, tube, and on bass gain... I can't turn everything up all the way at the same time without overdriving the Yamaha inserts at -2.

I still prefer the sound of the DI on my Eden bass amp (with Eden's magical Enhance [EQ] turned to 2 o'clock) except the Eden is a lot noisier... Eden wants about $300 to upgrade the DI.

I can see using the Summit at least for Jazz recordings. I still have to test my electric upright and test using a few Radial DI's through the mic section.

This weekend I have a session planned with vocals and acoustic guitar to test out all the new toys.

So far so good, and thanks again for the recomendation.