a_zander said:
Lets say electricity through a cable is negligible, placing a mic out by about a foot has a delay of ~1 ms.
1 ms isn't much, is it? I actually wouldn't worry about it much at 1' out. At that point you're probably past the 3-1 rule.
If you don't know what phase cancelation is then don't worry about it. Most of the time you'll say "Wow, it sounds worse with the DI on. I'll just mute it." Or maybe you won't notice any trouble at all.
If you are curious about phase & phase cancellation:
"Phase: the relative measurement of a period of time referenced to the start point of a cycle of a periodic waveform. In one complete period, a wave's polarity fluctuates 360° (180° positive and 180° negative). Absolute phase is a reference point in time within one cycle—e.g., halfway through one period, the waveform's phase is 180°; at one-quarter of the waveform, the phase is 90°. Relative phase is an instantaneous ("snapshot") measure of the difference in time between two acoustic or electronic waveforms of the same waveform and frequency. For example, if one waveform is one-quarter of the way through its cycle (90° at its peak positive value) and the other is three-quarters of the way through its cycle (270° at its greatest negative value), they are 180° out-of-phase with respect to each other. The two signals are "in-phase" if their amplitudes are identical at the same point in their cycles."
"Phase Cancellation: an attenuation of signal components resulting from combining out-of-phase waveforms. When two waveforms are mixed, their harmonics are added. If the signals are out-of-phase with each other, then the amplitudes of the harmonic components differ at various times (as determined by the phase relationship). If the added harmonics have the same polarity, then the signal is reinforced at those frequencies. If harmonics with positive values are added to harmonics with negative values, then the signal is attenuated (canceled) at those frequencies."
From
http://mixguides.com/studiomonitors/Basics/audio-glossary-basic-monitors/
So if your DI track and miced track are just a tiny bit out of time with each other (i.e. out of phase) you could have some wierd frequency shifting going on.
Anyway, I probably should have explained that all in my first post. This is part of the "engineering" aspect of audio engineering. Sorry if it ended up distracting from the thread, Matt, but I was responding to your stated plan of mixing line and mic signals for your bass. Chances
A 57 will work for bass, sure. Keep in mind the 57's frequency response, though.
See it here..
It rolls of the low frequencies starting at around 200hz. You can still get a good sound out of it for bass, but that's why it isn't considered a bass mic. I couldn't find a link the the e835's frequency response graph, but you can download a PDF with it
here.
It looks like the e835 has *less* low-end rolloff than the 57, so I'd try it first.
Placement?
http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/oct01/articles/bassrecording.asp
http://industryclick.com/magazinear...easeid=5577&magazinearticleid=65436&siteid=15
I found the links at
The Project Studio Handbook site.
Have fun!
Chris