C
CarmenC
New member
From RAP...
Well, I put the RNP thru some of its paces yesterday and it's a serious
contender. Lotsa neat little touches. When you hit phantom power, the phantom
power light blinks, the output is muted, and the phantom power is ramped up (or
down, depending on the phantom power switch position). No popping whatsoever.
The polarity invert works on the mic inputs, the DI inputs, and the insert
jacks, so it's easy to do a simple polarity invert, even on unbalanced
equipment.
The sound is making me crazy; how did Mark make it sound like there's lots of
iron in the path, but the top end still sounds sweet and clear, and very
extended? It's big sounding, but it's also transparent; how can that be? Last
night, I tried it with the following mics on my voice for just a few minutes
each:
Behringer ECM8000
Audix TR-40
Beyer M201
Shure SM-57
Coles 4038
RCA 77DX
RCA 44BX
Plenty of gain available with all of them, and the sound was magnificent. The
ribbon mics loved this little box. The Shure SM-57 surprised me (although the
57 is always surprising me). It REALLY sounded good as a vocal mic thru this
box, with almost no proximity buildup or popping, even at point blank range. The
RNP has a character, but it doesn't jump out and hit you in the face with its
sound.
With nothing plugged into the inputs, you could hear a little hiss in the +60
and the +66 dB sections of the 12 position gain switch, but the hiss was very
low level and smooth. Below 60 dB of gain, I couldn't hear any noise, but that
may just be me. It's a lot heavier than the RNC and Mark has used just about
every inch of front panel real estate, but it's laid out thoughtfully, and
everything is easy to get to.
Alex will be here today, so we'll really get a chance to put the RNP thru its
paces.
Harvey Gerst
Indian Trail Recording Studio
http://www.ITRstudio.com/
http://groups.google.com/groups?dq=...ng.com&prev=/groups?hl=en&group=rec.audio.pro
Peace.
Carmen

Well, I put the RNP thru some of its paces yesterday and it's a serious
contender. Lotsa neat little touches. When you hit phantom power, the phantom
power light blinks, the output is muted, and the phantom power is ramped up (or
down, depending on the phantom power switch position). No popping whatsoever.
The polarity invert works on the mic inputs, the DI inputs, and the insert
jacks, so it's easy to do a simple polarity invert, even on unbalanced
equipment.
The sound is making me crazy; how did Mark make it sound like there's lots of
iron in the path, but the top end still sounds sweet and clear, and very
extended? It's big sounding, but it's also transparent; how can that be? Last
night, I tried it with the following mics on my voice for just a few minutes
each:
Behringer ECM8000
Audix TR-40
Beyer M201
Shure SM-57
Coles 4038
RCA 77DX
RCA 44BX
Plenty of gain available with all of them, and the sound was magnificent. The
ribbon mics loved this little box. The Shure SM-57 surprised me (although the
57 is always surprising me). It REALLY sounded good as a vocal mic thru this
box, with almost no proximity buildup or popping, even at point blank range. The
RNP has a character, but it doesn't jump out and hit you in the face with its
sound.
With nothing plugged into the inputs, you could hear a little hiss in the +60
and the +66 dB sections of the 12 position gain switch, but the hiss was very
low level and smooth. Below 60 dB of gain, I couldn't hear any noise, but that
may just be me. It's a lot heavier than the RNC and Mark has used just about
every inch of front panel real estate, but it's laid out thoughtfully, and
everything is easy to get to.
Alex will be here today, so we'll really get a chance to put the RNP thru its
paces.
Harvey Gerst
Indian Trail Recording Studio
http://www.ITRstudio.com/
http://groups.google.com/groups?dq=...ng.com&prev=/groups?hl=en&group=rec.audio.pro
Peace.
Carmen
