
Chris F
New member
I've been recording with the following setup for a while now: Condenser mics---> Soundcraft Spirit M12 board---> MOTU 1224 ---> Digital Performer (Quicksilver G4). I've always gotten decent results, and had no problems with this setup.
Just today, I was getting ready to record an acoustic project when I noticed that there was a low frequency hum in all of the input signals. After some time spent troubleshooting, I discovered that the hum was coming from the phantom power supplied by the board - when I used a cheap Rolls phantom power box to power the mics, the board pres sounded fine, but as soon as I turned on the board's phantom switch, the hum was there.
So I guess I wondering what needs to happen next...can the phantom power supply on the board be repaired, or is that cost prohibitive on a board in that price range? If it can't be repaired, is there a reasonable priced phantom power supply for 8 channels that I could use to rout the signal through, or would I be better off looking at other options? I'm not much of a techie, but I'm willing to do what ever needs to be done to get the system up and running again. As is, the hum wouldn't allow any recording of any quality. Any and all ideas welcome!
Just today, I was getting ready to record an acoustic project when I noticed that there was a low frequency hum in all of the input signals. After some time spent troubleshooting, I discovered that the hum was coming from the phantom power supplied by the board - when I used a cheap Rolls phantom power box to power the mics, the board pres sounded fine, but as soon as I turned on the board's phantom switch, the hum was there.
So I guess I wondering what needs to happen next...can the phantom power supply on the board be repaired, or is that cost prohibitive on a board in that price range? If it can't be repaired, is there a reasonable priced phantom power supply for 8 channels that I could use to rout the signal through, or would I be better off looking at other options? I'm not much of a techie, but I'm willing to do what ever needs to be done to get the system up and running again. As is, the hum wouldn't allow any recording of any quality. Any and all ideas welcome!