R
RVLVNGDRS
New member
So far, the best value 8mic pre ive found is the Presonus Firepod. In the same price range (give or take 150$) would anyone have a suggestion for something better OR comparable?
lumbago said:Why you'd need 8 channels of mics for drums is another question.
All the time.RVLVNGDRS said:8 mics on the drumset?![]()
mikey@thecave said:sebatron 4 channel
daking 4 channel
that will keep you for a while
RVLVNGDRS said:8 mics on the drumset?![]()
warble2 said:Does that sound strange or something?
Although with a nice room, four mics would work fine - one on kick, one on snare and two overheads.
....then take a look at the Studio Projects SP828.RAK said:If you just want all analog.....
Gilliland said:....then take a look at the Studio Projects SP828.
And if you need Lightpipe output, consider the M-Audio Octane.
Both are in the desired price range, and both are better than their price would lead you to believe.
I've had mine in my remote rack for over a year now, and each time I take it out for a recording I wind up happier that I made that purchase. They have a nice clean "openness" that holds up well when stacked in a mix. Nothing magical about them, just clean and thoroughly usable. They use the Burr Brown INA217 instrumentation amps as their main chips. I don't know much about the rest of the circuitry, but it seems to do the job well.warble2 said:I've been wondering about the SP828. Sounds like it uses Burr Browns and would actually make a nice 8 ch. pre. Analog outs only might be a drawback from some, but looks interesting nonetheless.
If it were me, I'd decide based on which unit had features that best met my needs. I think both of them have pretty good reputations (for this price point anyway). And the feature sets for these two units are quite different. So that should make it easy to choose.RVLVNGDRS said:i found a focusrite octopre and an m-audio octane used for a good deal (equal price)
would anyone be able to give some agruments as to why you'd choose one over the other?
RVLVNGDRS said:i found a focusrite octopre and an m-audio octane used for a good deal (equal price)
would anyone be able to give some agruments as to why you'd choose one over the other?
i saw this thread https://homerecording.com/bbs/showthread.php?t=212253&highlight=m-audio+octane
and was convinced by the gentleman with 20000+ rep points that the octane would be an excellent choice for drums...(although i am not about to spend 700$ based on green dots and a big number...)