Nope, not yet. I'm gonna call Mark and see if I can go down there and help, but it's always hard getting out an anticipated product. It was much easier for him to get the RNC out, since nobody was waiting for it or even knew about it.
For the most part, I don't have a lot of outboard preamps. I think I have a total of four, but they're all "very good" preamps (or at least, "very expensive" preamps). The RNMP will be number five. They don't get used all that often, either; I usually use the board's mic preamps for 95% of the sound I record.
I often use these outboard preamps as DI boxes for basses or guitars, and occasionally, for very critical vocals. "Critical vocals" are things like soft ballads with sparse arrangements, where the vocal is all by itself, way out in front of the music, and I want a really pristine sound to cut through.
For male rock vocals, my typical technique is to run the vocal thru
a SansAmp TRI-O.D. box and add a touch of distortion (usually the "Tweed" setting, which adds a nice gritty tone to the vocals).
With so many of the new lower-cost mics available, adding so many interesting colors, I just really don't find it all that necessary to have a ton of outboard preamps lying around.
For the record, my main vocal mics (the ones I reach for first) are:
Condensers: MXL-V67G, MXL-V77, Neumann TLM-103
Ribbons:
RCA 77-DX,
RCA 44-BX
Dynamics: Shure SM-7, Beyer Soundstar MK-II
For whatever it's worth,
the Shure SM-7 usually beats out most of the other mics for typical vocals. When it doesn't sound right, one of the other mics (listed above) will usually work fine. I'll also adjust the tone with compressors, using the RNC (for clean), or
the dbx 166 or
the Drawmer 1960 (both for a darker texture).
My outboard preamps are:
Great River MP-2 (in the small studio)
Great River MP-2NV (in the big studio)
Drawmer 1960 (in the small studio)
Millinia Media
STT-1 Origin (in the big studio)
and soon (I hope), the FMR Audio RNMP
I do own a Rolls mic pre, but that's at Great River being modified (for about the last two years now), but it will get done whenever Dan Kennedy gets around to it.