Recording level????

AlterGino

New member
ive been doin some home recording. i only have a one channel interface and one mic. when you guys record how loud do you set your amps to. i have a marshall solid state and i noticed that when i crank it up, it ussaly sound better. but is recording at that level tha right way to go? does it need to be that loud?
 
Set your amp up at the volume you want.
Put the mic in front/edge of the speaker.
Adjust the volume control in your recording software so it does not clip (go into the red).
You should be good to go....
 
The actual TRACKING level (which, IMO/E should be peaking at maybe -15dBFS or so digitally after the preamp) has little to do with the SOURCE level (which should be wherever it needs to be to get the sound the way you want it).
 
The actual TRACKING level (which, IMO/E should be peaking at maybe -15dBFS or so digitally after the preamp) has little to do with the SOURCE level (which should be wherever it needs to be to get the sound the way you want it).

Interesting, I've noticed some of my files have peaks at -10 or 11. I've noticed a slight static sound on some of them, and was wondering if I'm going to high? Also I read if you record to low your somehow not using the full 24bits, is that B.S.?
 
when you guys record how loud do you set your amps to.

Until it sounds good to you...then set the mic/preamp for a good recording level. Like MM said...they are two different levels.


Interesting, I've noticed some of my files have peaks at -10 or 11. I've noticed a slight static sound on some of them, and was wondering if I'm going to high? Also I read if you record to low your somehow not using the full 24bits, is that B.S.?

You should be able to record right up to "0" dBFS without any issues on the digital end. However, chances are most of your front end will be pushing at its outer limits, so that's why it's often suggested to record between -18dBFS and -10dBFS...not so much for the digital side, but for your analog side.

The 24 bit thing comes into play if you record WAY low...but at the above levels you don't need to worry about loosing bits.
 
At bit depth of 24 bits, you have a theoretical dynamic range of 144dB. The actual dynamic range is less than that, though, due to electronic limitations. If you assume a real-world 24 bit dynamic range of 110dB (as specified for my Echo Audiofire 8), then tracking at, for example, -14dBFS peak still leaves you 96dB dynamic range - the full theoretical dynamic range of a CD. Tracking at such levels is about leaving headroom for processing, mixing, etc and keeping stuff away from digital clipping.

As I understand things, setting levels for tracking should be done in the analogue realm, ahead of the AD converter. If you use the levels controls in the software, you could simply be attenuating an already digitally clipped signal. Someone correct me please, if that is incorrect.

The signal does not have to be clipping in analogue to be digitally clipping. A perfectly clean analogue signal can simply be too hot for the AD converters analogue inputs which will cause digital clipping.

+1 for the Massive Mastering article.

Paul
 
Interesting, I've noticed some of my files have peaks at -10 or 11. I've noticed a slight static sound on some of them, and was wondering if I'm going to high? Also I read if you record to low your somehow not using the full 24bits, is that B.S.?
Of course you wouldn't be "using all the bits" -- But that's the point of all those bits and all that resolution.

Just like trying to capture an intimate photographic portrait while lighting the room with a 1.5MCP arc spotlight. Just because the camera might be able to handle that much light, it doesn't mean it's going to be a good photograph. Or driving a car with your foot to the floor the whole time. It's the least efficient way to run the motor.

Those sixteen point seven million possible points of resolution and theoretical 144dB dynamic range are there so you don't have to use them. Higher resolution at *normal* levels.

Or, you can floor it and overdrive the circuitry in your preamp, spectrally skewing and dynamically compromising the signal, throwing the SNR out the window, lose clarity, lose focus - But "use all the bits" --
 
I run my amps at the level that gets me the sound I want and then use mic choice, placement and gain staging to get appropriate levels throughout my recording chain and into my DAW

In the recording chain I aim for roughly line level RMS based on +4dBu and where that comes out on my DAW meters will depend on which converters I'm using and how they're calibrated
If I run through my Profire 610 that comes out to -12dBFS = Line level
If I run through my BLA Spparrow that comes out to -10dBFS = line level

This to me means I'm running my recording gear at the levels it was designed to run most optimally and keeps me way above my gear, tracking space or guitar amp noise floor and still leaves me plenty of room for transients and spikes to come through without clipping my converters

As always YMMV
 
Or, you can floor it and overdrive the circuitry in your preamp, spectrally skewing and dynamically compromising the signal, throwing the SNR out the window, lose clarity, lose focus - But "use all the bits" --

Well, I know a lot of people who use the S/N ratio actually as an excuse to track way too hot.

Every bit of gear has a noise floor somewhere--with any decent interface, that's probably going to be at around -90dB. However, probably based on days trying to record on a built in gamer's card with a S/N on the mic input of -55 or -60dB, I've seen people track everything at as near 0dBFS as possible...so when they turn down the track they also reduce the noise floor. Of course they also introduce all the other issues you mention...

For PDP, if you're getting distortion at around -10dBFS, you may need to look at your entire gain structure. You have to balance levels throughout your chain, not just at your interface. For example, every mic has a maximum input level--often around 130-140dB(SPL). If you put a mic six inches from a huge Marshall stack you can get near these levels and introduce clipping long before you get anywhere near your interface or computer. Similarly, if you crank up the input to your pre-amp too high then reduce it on the input to the computer, again you may find clipping on signals that appear to be well below 0dBFS.

Basically, you have to adjust anything and everything in your recording chain so levels are "about right" throughout with no big excursions too high or too low.
 
You want your amp quite loud so it pumps the insides of it. Too much and the speakers will not handle it and distort, and too little and you might end up with a thin weak sound.
Best thing to do is test recording at say 5 volume levels and then match the volumes for play back and listen to see what the difference is.

G
 
The volume of the guitar amp needs to be set so the amp sounds it's best.

The recording level should be set at the mic preamp/interface to achieve a line level signal into the DAW.

The source (instrument) volume, recording level, monitor volume, headphone level, headphone mix volume, etc... are all separate things that should be set for their own reasons. Always set the recording level first, then set the monitoring volume for the monitor mix using the appropriate control (not the mic preamp).
 
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