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diana001
New member
I've been experimenting with audio recording using Band-in-a-Box software (and ultimately, PowerTraks 8). Goal: to make a decent-sounding homemade CD. I've been using an inexpensive dynamic mike with a male 1/4" TRS that plugs into an 1/8" TRS Adaptor and then into my Soundblaster Audigy sound card. The sound's ok just for messing around, but I'm assuming that "the better the mike, the better the sound".
I have a much better mike I'd like to use, but I'm not having success. It's a Studio Products CL1 with a male 3-pin XLR, which I've plugged into an XLR-to-1/4" NAB adaptor with a male output, which in turn goes to a 1/4"-1/8" adaptor, which then goes into my Audigy sound card. In other words:
Mike ==> XLR to 1/4" NAB adaptor ==> 1/4"-to-1/8" NAB adaptor ==>Soundblaster Audigy soundcard.
This has been unsuccessful with two different XLR mikes, so I'm suspecting that there's something wrong with my XLR adaptor, or I have the wrong type, or something. The cable and other plugs are the same ones that give me reasonable success with the dynamic mike, so I'm assuming they're functional.
I recently ran across a reference that said: "The nicer microphones will usually have an XLR Connector, which means you will need an external mixer. Simply plug your microphone cable into any input channel on your mixer and then connect the mixer outputs to the line input on your soundcard as described above." True? Any way around it? Sort of defeats the purpose to have to acquire an analog mixer just to use a good mike, but, if that's what it'll take, I'm willin'.
I've also run across the issue of "iimpedance" -- and even something about keeping the XLR adaptor LEVEL? Perhaps I have an XLR to 1/4" NAB Adaptor that is inadequate to the job -- are there low- and high-end ones? Seems like it.
I was also planning on recording right onto my capacious hard drive (120GB) -- but I also have a minidisc recorder. Would you suggest incorporating into my recording capabilities, or is it superfluous?
I'm a newbie, and just experimenting for fun, but I'll very much appreciate any advice you can offer me in this regard.
Thanks again for such a useful site.
I have a much better mike I'd like to use, but I'm not having success. It's a Studio Products CL1 with a male 3-pin XLR, which I've plugged into an XLR-to-1/4" NAB adaptor with a male output, which in turn goes to a 1/4"-1/8" adaptor, which then goes into my Audigy sound card. In other words:
Mike ==> XLR to 1/4" NAB adaptor ==> 1/4"-to-1/8" NAB adaptor ==>Soundblaster Audigy soundcard.
This has been unsuccessful with two different XLR mikes, so I'm suspecting that there's something wrong with my XLR adaptor, or I have the wrong type, or something. The cable and other plugs are the same ones that give me reasonable success with the dynamic mike, so I'm assuming they're functional.
I recently ran across a reference that said: "The nicer microphones will usually have an XLR Connector, which means you will need an external mixer. Simply plug your microphone cable into any input channel on your mixer and then connect the mixer outputs to the line input on your soundcard as described above." True? Any way around it? Sort of defeats the purpose to have to acquire an analog mixer just to use a good mike, but, if that's what it'll take, I'm willin'.
I've also run across the issue of "iimpedance" -- and even something about keeping the XLR adaptor LEVEL? Perhaps I have an XLR to 1/4" NAB Adaptor that is inadequate to the job -- are there low- and high-end ones? Seems like it.
I was also planning on recording right onto my capacious hard drive (120GB) -- but I also have a minidisc recorder. Would you suggest incorporating into my recording capabilities, or is it superfluous?
I'm a newbie, and just experimenting for fun, but I'll very much appreciate any advice you can offer me in this regard.
Thanks again for such a useful site.