C
Cheeky Monkey
New member
Hi,
My acoustic amp is a Carvin AG100D (3 ch., incl. XLR mic connection on ch. 3). I'm hoping I can use it to power my condenser mic for PC recording, but I'm not entirely sure and I can't seem to find it in my amp documentation.
I just did some experimentation. I connected my mic to the XLR jack and ran a 1/4" cable from the rear panel "stereo line out jack" and into the PC using a 1/8" reducer. I tried recording and am able to hear my voice, but there's a LOT of hum/distortion along with it. Mind you, I did this using a mono cable (don't have a stereo cable at the moment) and I realize the "stereo line out jack" requires a stereo cable. Might this be the problem? Is it possible that the XLR inputs and signal outputs on most amps aren't designed for a nice, quiet signal fit for recording? Further, are there probably impedance issues as well as a ground loop hum thrown in for good measure?
Before I proceed further, I want to make sure I'm doing this the right way to begin with -- and, will my amp serve this purpose at all? I eventually plan to buy a digital recording USB, but for now, to save money, I want to try using the equipment I already have (plus buying a stereo cable if this is all I need).
Thanks in advance for any advice. Much appreciated.
My acoustic amp is a Carvin AG100D (3 ch., incl. XLR mic connection on ch. 3). I'm hoping I can use it to power my condenser mic for PC recording, but I'm not entirely sure and I can't seem to find it in my amp documentation.
I just did some experimentation. I connected my mic to the XLR jack and ran a 1/4" cable from the rear panel "stereo line out jack" and into the PC using a 1/8" reducer. I tried recording and am able to hear my voice, but there's a LOT of hum/distortion along with it. Mind you, I did this using a mono cable (don't have a stereo cable at the moment) and I realize the "stereo line out jack" requires a stereo cable. Might this be the problem? Is it possible that the XLR inputs and signal outputs on most amps aren't designed for a nice, quiet signal fit for recording? Further, are there probably impedance issues as well as a ground loop hum thrown in for good measure?
Before I proceed further, I want to make sure I'm doing this the right way to begin with -- and, will my amp serve this purpose at all? I eventually plan to buy a digital recording USB, but for now, to save money, I want to try using the equipment I already have (plus buying a stereo cable if this is all I need).
Thanks in advance for any advice. Much appreciated.