
skippy
New member
In case anybody is still interested in this thread- I finally finished up my mic/access patch strip and got it back in the rack.
What shows up on it are, from left to right: the 4 loose mic lines (the secondary mic lines to each of the 4 downstairs playing positions) on the 4 male XLRS, mic inputs for channels 8-11 at the board on the four female XLRs, and three access/multing points: one male XLR and two female XLRS that are multed to 2 or 4 regular 1/4" TRS connectors, so that people don't feel obligated to stuff their regular 1/4" plugs into my telephone-type patch strips...
A more elaborate or larger studio might do well to have a larger two-unit bay for this (or more): 4 pairs of XLRs for mic patching won't work unless you have most of your mic runs permanently dedicated to input channels, as I do (the fewer connections in the signal path, the better). My old room had 2 rows of 12 male and female XLRs for mic patching, and a separate 1-unit strip with a bunch of 1/4" TRS, RCA, MIDI, and other connectors cobbled onto it... But remember: XLRs do not have switching contacts for normalling, so any patching will require a cable.
Pix of my current (vastly simplified!) setup below.
What shows up on it are, from left to right: the 4 loose mic lines (the secondary mic lines to each of the 4 downstairs playing positions) on the 4 male XLRS, mic inputs for channels 8-11 at the board on the four female XLRs, and three access/multing points: one male XLR and two female XLRS that are multed to 2 or 4 regular 1/4" TRS connectors, so that people don't feel obligated to stuff their regular 1/4" plugs into my telephone-type patch strips...
A more elaborate or larger studio might do well to have a larger two-unit bay for this (or more): 4 pairs of XLRs for mic patching won't work unless you have most of your mic runs permanently dedicated to input channels, as I do (the fewer connections in the signal path, the better). My old room had 2 rows of 12 male and female XLRs for mic patching, and a separate 1-unit strip with a bunch of 1/4" TRS, RCA, MIDI, and other connectors cobbled onto it... But remember: XLRs do not have switching contacts for normalling, so any patching will require a cable.
Pix of my current (vastly simplified!) setup below.