K
Kerrie
New member
Hi all,
Sorry if this is such an elementary question, but it has me scratching my head.
I have a A&H MixWiz that I use for little live sound gigs and recently I decided I wanted to start recording all tracks separately using the direct outs. So I purchased an Echo Audiofire12 and Sonar X1 to run on my laptop.
While the setup works perfectly, no problems actually recording, I'm confused as to the differences in metering on an analog frontend and digital daw.
Here's an example of what's happening:
Say I have a band I'm doing sound for. I have channels for kick, snare, overhead, bass, guitar 1, guitar 2, vocals.
When I'm getting the bands levels set up, I'd take each instrument PFL it, ask the musician to try and play the loudest note/patch/whatever that they would play in the set, and adjust the trim until the body of the signal is hitting zero on the A&H meter, with peak transients obviously going beyond that without clipping. (Except for a'la Dave Rat experiments where I have intentionally clipped the kick drum slightly - but that's for another discussion). Generally, my highest peaks my don't ever exceed +10dB - +14dB on the A&H main meter when I'm PFL'ing an individual track.
So in terms of gain staging for the live sound end of things, from mixer main outs > main eq > crossover > power amps > speakers... no problems there. And everything sounds great.
But now that I'm using the direct outs of the A&H, and recording each track with the audiofire12 into Sonar, every channel is clipping. I'm confused about the metering differences! On the MixWiz, the main meter is -30 to +16dB. In Sonar, 0dB (FS?) is the point of clipping. The recorded tracks are all ultra hot and clipping often.
It seems that the only way for Sonar not to clip when recording from the A&H is to set input levels on the A&H way lower than I normally would, where peaks are hitting around the 0 mark. But that doesn't seem correct to me.
Can someone shed some light on what's going on here? Do I need to somehow pad the inputs going into the audiofire/Sonar?
Thanks for any insight guys!
Kerrie
Sorry if this is such an elementary question, but it has me scratching my head.

I have a A&H MixWiz that I use for little live sound gigs and recently I decided I wanted to start recording all tracks separately using the direct outs. So I purchased an Echo Audiofire12 and Sonar X1 to run on my laptop.
While the setup works perfectly, no problems actually recording, I'm confused as to the differences in metering on an analog frontend and digital daw.
Here's an example of what's happening:
Say I have a band I'm doing sound for. I have channels for kick, snare, overhead, bass, guitar 1, guitar 2, vocals.
When I'm getting the bands levels set up, I'd take each instrument PFL it, ask the musician to try and play the loudest note/patch/whatever that they would play in the set, and adjust the trim until the body of the signal is hitting zero on the A&H meter, with peak transients obviously going beyond that without clipping. (Except for a'la Dave Rat experiments where I have intentionally clipped the kick drum slightly - but that's for another discussion). Generally, my highest peaks my don't ever exceed +10dB - +14dB on the A&H main meter when I'm PFL'ing an individual track.
So in terms of gain staging for the live sound end of things, from mixer main outs > main eq > crossover > power amps > speakers... no problems there. And everything sounds great.
But now that I'm using the direct outs of the A&H, and recording each track with the audiofire12 into Sonar, every channel is clipping. I'm confused about the metering differences! On the MixWiz, the main meter is -30 to +16dB. In Sonar, 0dB (FS?) is the point of clipping. The recorded tracks are all ultra hot and clipping often.

It seems that the only way for Sonar not to clip when recording from the A&H is to set input levels on the A&H way lower than I normally would, where peaks are hitting around the 0 mark. But that doesn't seem correct to me.
Can someone shed some light on what's going on here? Do I need to somehow pad the inputs going into the audiofire/Sonar?
Thanks for any insight guys!
Kerrie
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