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A buddy of mine let me borrow his Great River Mp2nv and I fell in love with the thing however there is one thing bothering me. When he's tracking a song from his motif xs to Pro Tools he always has the impedance switch in. He's tracking everything from kick, snare, guitars, bass, piano pretty much everthing is with the impedance switch on.

Is this a good thing?

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Boswell Mon, 12/01/2008 - 19:28

The impedance switch on the GR pre-amps selects either 1200 or 300 Ohm as the load impedance on the XLR mic input.

For some microphones (mainly FET-buffered capacitor mics), the switch will have little effect, but the 300 Ohm setting may attenuate relative to the 1200 Ohm.

For many dynamic mics (including ribbons), however, there will be a sonic difference, as the 300 Ohm setting will give a higher damping factor for the coil (or ribbon).

The GR pre-amp also has a switch for loading the output transformer with 600 Ohm. Switching this in runs the transformer much harder, which many engineers like to do for some types of acoustic material.

anonymous Mon, 12/01/2008 - 23:53

I have the UA 4110, which also features an impedance selector. In addition to the technical explanation above, there is a certain sound that you get (on some mics) by changing this setting. It often gives me the sense that the source can be "roomy" or more "focussed". As usual though, words are poor at describing sound - try it yourself and see!