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djclueveli
New member
does anyone know what the presonus firepod converters are calibrated to? also does it matter what xlr cords u use?
Assuming your soundcard is truely delivering +4dBu to the FP (can you verify that?) and there is no boost or cut of the signal somewhere along the way (esp. on the FP itself), then it sounds like it's calibrated for 0VU/+4dBu = -24dBFS.mrhotapples said:I used the virtual MR1 on the RealTraps site to generate a sine wave at 1khz at +4dbu, plugged my soundcard's line out into my firepod's line in, and Sonar reads it at -24.2db. At 0dbV, it's at -26.2db peak. Into the inputs on the front, it's a different story. -10.4db at +4dbu, -12.4db at 0dbV.
I dunno what I'm doing...Help me here...But the average of those numbers is -18.3.
Would that mean that -18db is a good estimate to shoot for or am I wrong and is -10 or so where it's at? I've been recording things at -18db peak in Sonar for months now and it'd suck if I'd be getting better results at -10db.
Well, some coincidences are really not all that surrendipitousmrhotapples said:How would I go about getting an accurate reading then? I've got the volume controls all the way up in Windows. The sound is louder when going through the Firepod's preamps, but the direct line in is -24dbfs to -22dbfs. I'll do a test on another computer with a different soundcard under the same settings. If this is true though, then I've been wasting 6 decibels of headroom.
And that sure is cool, that -18.3 thing, I love coincidences!
I assume you'e talking about an Alesis 3630 comp? And I also assume you meant to say -2dBVU instead of -2dBFS?mrhotapples said:I have a 3630...I plugged my soundcard into it, no gain, no nothin'...It read -2dbfs at +4DBU.
That could be true, assuming that the reading you took on the 3630 was with the meters set to output level and not input level and that you did indeed mean an output reading of -2dBVU on the 3630 (and assuming that at range that 1dBVU is going to yield about 3dBFS, which is *normally* correct.)mrhotapples said:Sonar still read -24dbfs at the line in. Since I'm actually getting -2dbu from my soundcard, this means that Firepods are calibrated at -18dbfs!
Right?
The only reason he's using the soundcard (I believe) is as a way to generate the test tone signal he is using to test calibration on the FirePod. In other words, he's just sending a sine wave out of his sound card so that he can send that sine wave into the FirePod to see what kind of levels he gets through the FirePod. Otherwise, the soundcard is not normally part of the recording process.djclueveli said:i'm so lost with this dbfs stuff and line signal. i dont use my sound card. i just plug my firepod into the firewire and use that as my sound card. and when people say -18dbfs is that depending how loud u sing or not or its just a certain amount of gain of the firepod or whatever other gear using it. so if i wanted to get a whisper sound to -18dbfs does that mean i have to crank up the gain all the way so my voice will reach as high as -18dbfs? i'm so lost. so glen or anyone else do u mind eplain this again one more time lol. and also to see the dbfs in soundforge to i go to tools and then statistics and the read the RMS level? also mrhotapples how come u dont just use the firepodwithout pluggin it in to the soundcard? doesnt the firepod have better sound than the soundcard? i have a sound blaster sound card. also to what oclock do u normally turn the gain to get a good vocal take. thanks
Nope.mrhotapples said:This is all so confusing...If my 3630 is calibrated to +4dbu, and I send signal from my soundcard in, and it reaches -2db on the input meter, do I not assume that if I add 6db, it's at +4 and that if Sonar picks it up as -24db, adding 6 to that makes -18 to compensate for my sound card outputting too low a signal?