
Nick The Man
New member
are these the same thing .. for example how on a mixer there is gain and there is level ... are they identical
dgatwood said:Boost early, boost often?
Seriously, though.... In an ideal world, with all amp stages being equal, your best bet is to gain up early. That way the audio through the remainder of the chain will be at a relatively high level, and thus any noise introduced during the remainder of the chain will be lower proportional to the signal level.
All things being unequal, though, boost as much as you can with the amp stage that introduces the least noise.... Experiment.
Adam P said:Solo a channel and bring the gain up so that only the loudest of your peaks make the clip indicators light up, with your average levels much lower. Then use the channel fader to adjust the level to the 2-mix.
I think of it as this: The gain is for the absolute level. The channel fader is for the relative level.
Does your board have meters? If it does, use them to set your levels.Nick The Man said:so dont let the peak lights go on?... keep things right on the breaking point of peaking
Farview said:Does your board have meters? If it does, use them to set your levels.
There is no reason for anything but drums to sometimes hit the peak light. If you are hitting the peak light with, for example, a distorted guitar, you are just recording way too hot.
There aren't even a main set of meters for the output?Nick The Man said:yeha ok thats what i thought ... no i dont have meters but im saving for a board that does have meters so ... hoprfully ill have that soon
Farview said:There aren't even a main set of meters for the output?
You read my mind. Set the levels so they are at 0dbVU. Make sure you read the scale, some mixers are different than others in the way they implement the meter.Nick The Man said:oh well yeah .. use the solo button then ... i forgot about doin that
That is the exact opposite of what you are supposed to do.Nick The Man said:ok so this is what ive been doing :
turning the gain/trim all the way up and then moving the leve/fader up until im at 0
Farview said:That is the exact opposite of what you are supposed to do.
put the fader at unity (the scale along the fader might say 0) hit solo and set the level with the gain/trim control.
The gain control is for bringing the incoming signal up to or down to line level. The faders are for setting the relative volumes of the different channels against each other.
Farview said:That is the exact opposite of what you are supposed to do.
put the fader at unity (the scale along the fader might say 0) hit solo and set the level with the gain/trim control.
The gain control is for bringing the incoming signal up to or down to line level. The faders are for setting the relative volumes of the different channels against each other.
Adam P said:Solo a channel and bring the gain up so that only the loudest of your peaks make the clip indicators light up, with your average levels much lower. Then use the channel fader to adjust the level to the 2-mix.
Adam P said:I think of it as this: The gain is for the absolute level. The channel fader is for the relative level.