
Scottgman
Legend in Own Mind
This is actually a two-part question-- I'm not sure if this is the right thread for the second question, but I'll give it a go.
I recently received my new MXL-v67B and have been enjoying this new toy. This is my first condensor mic and WOW what a difference!
Anyway, last weekend, during my first test run with the mic, it took a dive. I had it on a stand in the other room while my buddy was laying down some vocals. When we were listening to the playback, my dog decided to come hang out with us and got tangled in the mic cable which produced-- to my horror-- two loud thuds from the other room. Apparently, the mic hit the wall before it hit the (carpeted) ground. I seems to still be working OK but I was wondering how much (or little) abuse these mics can handle?
My second question refers to singing into these mics. During the previously mentioned test-run, the vocals got too hot when my buddy started more or less screaming. He said he was trying to keep his head in the same position relative to the mic. Is this good? It sounded great on the quieter parts-- but when he started screaming it would clip. Should the singer back-off the mic on the louder parts or should I turn down the gain?
At first I was worried that the distortion on playback was because my brand-new mic just took a dive but now I think it was a stupid newbie mistake on the tracking (too much gain). Thanks in advance for you help!
Cheers!
I recently received my new MXL-v67B and have been enjoying this new toy. This is my first condensor mic and WOW what a difference!
Anyway, last weekend, during my first test run with the mic, it took a dive. I had it on a stand in the other room while my buddy was laying down some vocals. When we were listening to the playback, my dog decided to come hang out with us and got tangled in the mic cable which produced-- to my horror-- two loud thuds from the other room. Apparently, the mic hit the wall before it hit the (carpeted) ground. I seems to still be working OK but I was wondering how much (or little) abuse these mics can handle?
My second question refers to singing into these mics. During the previously mentioned test-run, the vocals got too hot when my buddy started more or less screaming. He said he was trying to keep his head in the same position relative to the mic. Is this good? It sounded great on the quieter parts-- but when he started screaming it would clip. Should the singer back-off the mic on the louder parts or should I turn down the gain?
At first I was worried that the distortion on playback was because my brand-new mic just took a dive but now I think it was a stupid newbie mistake on the tracking (too much gain). Thanks in advance for you help!
Cheers!