G
groovewrangler
New member
Forgive me if this question has been asked a million times, but I've been searching the forums archive all day without finding a thread about someone having the same problem I'm having.
I've always had a hard time recording electric guitar by micing the cabinet, namely, an annoying, random static crackle that glues itself to the track. I put up with the problem for years, attributing it to the old TEAC needing serviced, or the crusty used tape that I'd often end up using... but I switched to a computer-based recording rig, and the problem is still there, and even more annoying without generational loss to soften it a bit...
Thus far, I have changed every variable I can think of: various solid state amps, none of which exhibit the problem when played live; different types of mics; different mic placements; different guitars; different cables to and from every unit in my chain, and a completely different equipment chain, to boot; I've even moved once since I started home recording, and I've recorded with two of the amps and guitars in a professional studio with no such problem (which eliminates the possibility that I have a weird personal electric field, heh). The problem definitely does not relate to clipping or overloading a mic, either; the static seems to show up only when the instrument is being played, but when during a performance it occurs seems to be totally random. Today I bought a power conditioner, turned the peak level down to about -20 on the preamp while recording, and it's still happening. I'd like to thank everybody for reading this, and would gladly appreciate any advice you may have.
I've always had a hard time recording electric guitar by micing the cabinet, namely, an annoying, random static crackle that glues itself to the track. I put up with the problem for years, attributing it to the old TEAC needing serviced, or the crusty used tape that I'd often end up using... but I switched to a computer-based recording rig, and the problem is still there, and even more annoying without generational loss to soften it a bit...
Thus far, I have changed every variable I can think of: various solid state amps, none of which exhibit the problem when played live; different types of mics; different mic placements; different guitars; different cables to and from every unit in my chain, and a completely different equipment chain, to boot; I've even moved once since I started home recording, and I've recorded with two of the amps and guitars in a professional studio with no such problem (which eliminates the possibility that I have a weird personal electric field, heh). The problem definitely does not relate to clipping or overloading a mic, either; the static seems to show up only when the instrument is being played, but when during a performance it occurs seems to be totally random. Today I bought a power conditioner, turned the peak level down to about -20 on the preamp while recording, and it's still happening. I'd like to thank everybody for reading this, and would gladly appreciate any advice you may have.