H
hipknot01
New member
if im trying to mix a song and i find out theres a hissing sound on a few of the tracks, how can i get rid of it? is there anyway to just take it away?
Is the hiss noticable just at the beginning and end of the song or throughout? If it's the latter, you've recorded at a low level and may have to re-track it hotter.hipknot01 said:if im trying to mix a song and i find out theres a hissing sound on a few of the tracks, how can i get rid of it? is there anyway to just take it away?
The noise floor is the sum unwanted signal that is present in a recording chain. It's inherent to all audio gear. Some equipment has a higher one, and some lower. The closer your recording level is to the noise floor, the more apparent the floor is when you bring your levels up to a useable volume.hipknot01 said:If you're recording too close to the noise floor no.
huh?
Yes. Also, you need to rule out other parts of your chain as the source of the hiss. A search on gain staging and headroom may give you better information than what I'm offering here, but hopefully this helps a bit.hipknot01 said:oooo so if i turn up the pres(asumming they arent the things causing fuzz) then i will have a cleaner signal....right?
I believe it's where there is a voltage equilibrium(voltage in=voltage out.) This is usually between 7 and 8 on a mixer's fader or around 2 o'clock on a gain knob. For some reason audio gear likes to run at these levels.hipknot01 said:ughhh
help with the unity thing