some advice..

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fletch88

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Hey guys! i have a really fast computer now so thats ok now im onto the recording equipment.

ok now i need to ask you if this is right

i will fit a delta 44 into the computer yes, and then my electro acoustic can then be put straight into that with the normal guitar to amp lead

then with a MXL MXLV67G microphone for vocals would then go straight into it aswell.

would this get me good recordings and is it a good setup? i eman have i got everything right here lol

thanks
tom
 
No, the 44 is an analog to digital convertor and vice versa. You'll need some sort of pre amp to boost the signal from your mic and guitar. Either a stand alone mic pre/DI or a small mixer

Here's a good place to get a better understanding of how things work.... Tweakheadz
 
does the audio buddy have 2 channels?
Generally the DMP3 is considered a very good deal for the money for entry level preamps with two channels. I have one and it it very nice for what it does.

Daav
 
sounds good thanks :) so alright

electro acoustic guitar
microphone

so the delta 44 has the analogue box thing
so i presume that is connected to the soundcard in the back of the computer
then the preamp plugged into that
then the mic and guitar are plugged into the preamp

and is that a setup? lol
 
fletch88 said:
sounds good thanks :) so alright

electro acoustic guitar
microphone

so the delta 44 has the analogue box thing
so i presume that is connected to the soundcard in the back of the computer
then the preamp plugged into that
then the mic and guitar are plugged into the preamp

and is that a setup? lol

Bi Jovi, you've CRACKED it! :D ...yeah, that's about the size of things.

You could still go with a small mixer with built in pre's, you could then take the 44 outputs back to the mixer then the main mixer outputs to your monitors (if you have some...and if you don't you'll want some sooner than later) that would also let you monitor with zero latency, give you a headphone mix, let you add some outboard reverb or delay to vocals to help your performance while still recording them dry....endless amounts of frustration free fun with an outboard mixer.
 
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