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How high should each level be in my chain?

1) AT2035 LDC (with bass rolloff and -10pad)

2) Behrcrapinger Xenyx1832FX Mixer (with trim, fader, master, and low-cut)

3) Seasound Soloist AD/DA Converter Line Input

4) Computer

Thanks!

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Comments

RemyRAD Fri, 03/20/2009 - 02:02

If you're recording something of a loud nature, you'll want to engage the pad on your microphone to keep from overloading its internal electronics.

On your mixer, you can generally engage a solo button on the microphone input you are trying to adjust. This will display the mixers preamp operation level. Trim up or trim down for a general indication of -12. This ensures proper headroom & gain.

When being fed from your mixer, you're audio interface on your computer should generally be 2/3 of the way up or at approximately a 2 o'clock position. If it's much higher or lower, it may be an indication of too much or too little output from your mixer.

These are just generalities but are mostly applicable to all professional equipment. Some consumer oriented equipment operates at different levels from professional equipment, generally lower on the order of 14 DB or more. This causes a lot of confusion amongst green engineers since the dividing line between professional & consumer has blurred through the years. You always want to have at least 15 DB of usable headroom before clipping & distortion occurs.

I like my loudness like I like my rock-and-roll. Recorded.
Ms. Remy Ann David

RemyRAD Fri, 03/20/2009 - 10:37

Yes, in fact, most professional equipment has 20 or more DB of headroom. Analog tape typically had better than 15 DB of headroom above your standard reference operating levels. Headroom is definitely the difference between Pro stuff & toy stuff. Between Pro sounding mixes & beginner's sounding mixes. You can never have too much headroom. Well, that's not totally true. Most folks don't need 30 DB of headroom. But 15 is totally realistic. This is not just a personal preference. It's the difference between experience and limited experience. Pushing Pro preamps to near the point of overload can provide for an interesting sonic character. This is a little different than topping out in your digital recording, which produces strictly clipping. Clipping produces odd order harmonic distortion which is dissonant. That ain't normal. True, different types of distortion, in small quantities, can be musically enhancing, which are generally even order harmonic's that occur naturally in life. All musical instruments produce even order harmonics. Some equipment does also. Such as tubes & class A transistor equipment. And to a lesser extent class A/B designed equipment, which is the most common, in conjunction with adequate headroom can produce more pleasing results.

Melodious & Harmonically yours
Ms. Remy Ann David