I
iboersma
New member
Hello,
Let me preface this by saying that I am an audio hardware newbie, so pardon any serious oversights on my part...
I just bought a Firebox to use with my Shure SM7B mic and Windows XP
(SP2) system for doing voiceover work. I followed all the instructions about how to install the driver (v.1.20) that came with the system, and everything seemed to install fine.
However, now when I fire up either Adobe Audition or Cubase LE, the
recording input levels seem artificially low. I have my SM7B mic
connected to the Mic XLR port on the front of the Firebox and my
headphones connected to the headphone jack. Those are the only 2
items I have plugged in to the box since my VO work doesn't require any more gear than that. I have the gain for the Mic XLR
jack at it's highest level on the box and also have the "Mic 1" volume
at it's highest level in the software Mixer application that came with
the Firebox. I also have the "Out 1/2" volume in the Firebox software Mixer at its maximum level and have also toggled on the extra 12dbs of boost for Mic 1
and Mic 2 in the "Hardware Settings" screen. Even with all this,
speaking in a fairly loud voice (louder than the average voice I use in a commercial read, for instance) only produces a peak of -12db in both
Audition and Cubase. I would expect that jacking all the volume
settings up on both the physical Firebox AND the software mixer would
have me redlining the input, but I'm not even close. I can also not
get the "Clip" light on the Firebox to ever light up, indicating that I'm not getting enough "juice" to the box to clip. The Firebox comes with 2 Presonus pre-amps with the XLR mics, so I'm at a complete loss at this point. Shouldn't a "normal" system have me at least able to get to 0dBs (zero) on the meter if I jack all the gains up? With this arrangement, I can't even hope to get near zero in a normal speaking voice...
The Shure SM7B is a dynamic mic, and it needs no phantom power, so
that can't be the issue. It's also a broadcasting industry standard,
so it's not like it's some cheapo, fly-by-night mic...
I've switched the firewire cable from one jack to the other, both on
my computer as well as on the Firebox itself, and it makes no
difference.
Any ideas? I am running a Dell 8400 P4 with 3.00 ghz processor and
1GB of RAM. I have Windows XP with SP 2 and I have my Firebox plugged into one of two open IEEE 1394 ports on my box.
Help!
Ian
Let me preface this by saying that I am an audio hardware newbie, so pardon any serious oversights on my part...

I just bought a Firebox to use with my Shure SM7B mic and Windows XP
(SP2) system for doing voiceover work. I followed all the instructions about how to install the driver (v.1.20) that came with the system, and everything seemed to install fine.
However, now when I fire up either Adobe Audition or Cubase LE, the
recording input levels seem artificially low. I have my SM7B mic
connected to the Mic XLR port on the front of the Firebox and my
headphones connected to the headphone jack. Those are the only 2
items I have plugged in to the box since my VO work doesn't require any more gear than that. I have the gain for the Mic XLR
jack at it's highest level on the box and also have the "Mic 1" volume
at it's highest level in the software Mixer application that came with
the Firebox. I also have the "Out 1/2" volume in the Firebox software Mixer at its maximum level and have also toggled on the extra 12dbs of boost for Mic 1
and Mic 2 in the "Hardware Settings" screen. Even with all this,
speaking in a fairly loud voice (louder than the average voice I use in a commercial read, for instance) only produces a peak of -12db in both
Audition and Cubase. I would expect that jacking all the volume
settings up on both the physical Firebox AND the software mixer would
have me redlining the input, but I'm not even close. I can also not
get the "Clip" light on the Firebox to ever light up, indicating that I'm not getting enough "juice" to the box to clip. The Firebox comes with 2 Presonus pre-amps with the XLR mics, so I'm at a complete loss at this point. Shouldn't a "normal" system have me at least able to get to 0dBs (zero) on the meter if I jack all the gains up? With this arrangement, I can't even hope to get near zero in a normal speaking voice...
The Shure SM7B is a dynamic mic, and it needs no phantom power, so
that can't be the issue. It's also a broadcasting industry standard,
so it's not like it's some cheapo, fly-by-night mic...
I've switched the firewire cable from one jack to the other, both on
my computer as well as on the Firebox itself, and it makes no
difference.
Any ideas? I am running a Dell 8400 P4 with 3.00 ghz processor and
1GB of RAM. I have Windows XP with SP 2 and I have my Firebox plugged into one of two open IEEE 1394 ports on my box.
Help!
Ian