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Hey guys.
I was looking for a strip on musicians friend and was kinda wondering if it would be easier to buy what I need separately.
For example.
PreSonus TUBEPre Microphone Preamp $99.99
COMP16 Compressor $99.99
PreSonus HP4 Discrete 4-Channel Headphone Amp $99.99 PreSonus EQ3B Parametric Equalizer $99.99

Has anyone owned any of these products? They seem to have good reviews on Musicians Friend. Let me narrow down my question a bit further. If I'm running an AT4033 into a Mackiecfx16 and into my echo layla/pc. will I hear a substantial improvement using this outboard gear?
I'm also going to purchase a RODE NTK mic. will that go well with this PreSonus stuff?

Thanks guys..
Keep in mind I'm really only interested in recording Vocals...an occasional keyboard and guitar...acoustic/electric. All separate and not at the same time.

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Comments

anonymous Mon, 02/16/2004 - 16:28

For the price of all that seperate Presonus gear you could get the new Presonus Eureka which recently got a favorable review in the latest issue of TapeOp. It's a single channel, one rack space unit with a mic pre, comp, and EQ and some nifty features. There are some up on Ebay right now for just over $400.

Then you'd only have one power chord instead of four! :)

Might be worth a look.

Davedog Mon, 02/16/2004 - 22:26

The Eureka that has been mentioned is quite a step above the other stuff they build.It has a pre/EQ/compressor and you can configure them in any order in the chain.It has transformer on the input and sounds very good.I havent applied it to everything yet but I am impressed with it so far at its price point.And yes they are around $500 street brandnew....If it matters to you, they are also able to be upgraded as far as the opamp chipsets....we have a couple to try out and will do so soon.I'm looking forward to popping in the Burr-Brown chip and also looking to try one out in my Soundcraft pres.You'll still need the headphone amp however....

anonymous Tue, 02/24/2004 - 10:43

Originally posted by chessparov:
Be wary on the NTK.

Chessparov is right, you should make sure the NTK is a good match for your voice before you buy one. If it's a good match, though, it's magical. It's amazing on acoustic guitar, cello, and upright bass too. If you have enought money, I'd get the NTK no matter what. Then, if it doesn't match your voice well, find a mic that does. Your NTK will find many, many uses either way.

bap Wed, 02/25/2004 - 06:40

Actually, I just bought it and it is due to arrive today. Will try it on a woman's voice tomorrow [alto range] and probably with a 7' Schimmel piano in a nice somewhat larger room. I'm interested in playing with the variable pattern.

There is a user review of the K2 over at Sound On Sound with other comments. Some say good for vocals, some say not - the usual. All say it is a pretty nice mic.

[ February 25, 2004, 12:36 PM: Message edited by: coats ]