C
chetbango
New member
I have done a search, and although it helped me alot, I still have a couple of questions...
First off, I'm planning a new machine, in the 1500 to 2000 range, not including monitor or speakers. I can build my own, as I have in the past, or if the price is reasonable, I could by an assembled one. I want a good gaming machine, so I plan on spending +/-300 bucks for the vid card alone.
Here is where I could use some help from some experts (y'all). I am interested in the new machine being a very simple type of home recording box. Like record a guitar track, and then adding a vocal and maybe another guitar track, maybe a drum/bass track. I don't forsee needing to record more than one or two lines at the same time. I am mostly concerned in ease of use over pro quality sound.
I have a crappy peavy 4 line PA, good quality guitars and amps, Sure SM58/57 mics.
I am obviosly a novice when it comes to recording, I have some limited experience on a TASCAM 4 track I used 5+ years ago, otherwise I have done little lately.
Can I build an adequate machine in this price range? I imagine I'll need a mixer eventually, but is there a sound card that I could plug straight into with either the mics, guitar or even through the PA's line out?
From doing the search I learned that 2 HD's are the way to go, should I get a RAID controller too?
I also learned the the sound blaster audigy ex is crap...so what sound card would you guys recommend? Would one with simple inputs paired with a mixer be better than one with a ton of inputs?
If anyone wants to take the time, I would be grateful to hear a "spec" for a machine in this price range ie MB, chip, RAM, soundcard, vid card, HD's, CD-RW's, RAID?, and any other devices that you may think would help. (like a mixer)
I have been searching for the answers, but the posts I have found are from people seemingly more interested in a much more powerful recording machine than I would likely use, so please forgive me if you feel like the answers I need are out there already. I am having a hard time separating hype from reality on many other websites.
Thanks again for your time.
First off, I'm planning a new machine, in the 1500 to 2000 range, not including monitor or speakers. I can build my own, as I have in the past, or if the price is reasonable, I could by an assembled one. I want a good gaming machine, so I plan on spending +/-300 bucks for the vid card alone.
Here is where I could use some help from some experts (y'all). I am interested in the new machine being a very simple type of home recording box. Like record a guitar track, and then adding a vocal and maybe another guitar track, maybe a drum/bass track. I don't forsee needing to record more than one or two lines at the same time. I am mostly concerned in ease of use over pro quality sound.
I have a crappy peavy 4 line PA, good quality guitars and amps, Sure SM58/57 mics.
I am obviosly a novice when it comes to recording, I have some limited experience on a TASCAM 4 track I used 5+ years ago, otherwise I have done little lately.
Can I build an adequate machine in this price range? I imagine I'll need a mixer eventually, but is there a sound card that I could plug straight into with either the mics, guitar or even through the PA's line out?
From doing the search I learned that 2 HD's are the way to go, should I get a RAID controller too?
I also learned the the sound blaster audigy ex is crap...so what sound card would you guys recommend? Would one with simple inputs paired with a mixer be better than one with a ton of inputs?
If anyone wants to take the time, I would be grateful to hear a "spec" for a machine in this price range ie MB, chip, RAM, soundcard, vid card, HD's, CD-RW's, RAID?, and any other devices that you may think would help. (like a mixer)
I have been searching for the answers, but the posts I have found are from people seemingly more interested in a much more powerful recording machine than I would likely use, so please forgive me if you feel like the answers I need are out there already. I am having a hard time separating hype from reality on many other websites.
Thanks again for your time.