A
Atipp
New member
I have got a god awful Hum (or buzz if you so desire) somewhere in my chain. First, here's what I've got; A NADY GEQ 215, and a NADY CL-5000 Compressor/limiter. Now get this I recorded Guitars and bass straight through the EQ to the Compressor and straight into the mixer (a tascam portastudio). now the guitars came out clean, but I'm trying to get some vocals now and I get a signal to noise ratio of like 2:1 at best. I've
cut one component at a time; i.e. unplug the mike, then the cable from the EQ, then the output cable from the EQ then the compressor, etc... the noise stops between the input of the EQ and the output of the EQ. It's in the EQ right?, well Why did my guitars come out clean through the same setup. This EQ was only $99 new. did I just get crap? because it worked before. If it helps any, I run into the XLR(balanced?) input on the EQ, and out either the 1/4" or the rca (no more xlr cords to run out that output would that help though). I hope I'm just doing something wrong, and not dealing with S@#t equipment. Does anyone have any good news for me
Thanks a million
Adam T.
adtsks@citlink.net
cut one component at a time; i.e. unplug the mike, then the cable from the EQ, then the output cable from the EQ then the compressor, etc... the noise stops between the input of the EQ and the output of the EQ. It's in the EQ right?, well Why did my guitars come out clean through the same setup. This EQ was only $99 new. did I just get crap? because it worked before. If it helps any, I run into the XLR(balanced?) input on the EQ, and out either the 1/4" or the rca (no more xlr cords to run out that output would that help though). I hope I'm just doing something wrong, and not dealing with S@#t equipment. Does anyone have any good news for me
Thanks a million
Adam T.
adtsks@citlink.net