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a) set up the mix on the group busses and record from those while feeding the busses to the LR busses and adjust the house level from the LR busses, or b) run a separate recording mix off the aux busses fed pre fader, so that any changes made on the LR busses have no effect on the recording level. Good luck! Andre |
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We have exactly the same board in one of our spaces. I have expirenced some of the issues you have, but not nearly as drastic. As a whole the board is a bit noisier than I expected, but we have never had any evidence of it in recordings (we record 50 concerts a year). I have only on a few occasions had to compensate by running the board harder to improve the over all quality, but that is rare.
We use 2 aux sends to record directly to a TEAC CD recorder, and have never had a problem with the noise floor there. In fact, we regularly get compliment on how good they sound. ~Dave |
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When the input volume is reasonable it sounds very good, crisp, clean. Just when the inputs are very low, you're stuck listening to the noise floor. It's a fairly low noise floor, but it's still noticable.
And, yes, when I personally mix the show and am recording that night, I always push the dialogue a bit high to make sure the recording picks it up well. And, I do have the PA outputs on separate busses, so last night I dropped the PA outputs to force the sound op to run all inputs higher, and that helped. I have noticed, both on the Mackie CFX-20 and on the LX7, that the group-to-mix adds another layer of noise, so running input channels directly (which the Mackie can't do but fortunately the LX7 can) definitely cuts down on the noise a notch. I can also try a pair of auxes to see if the summing amps on those are any cleaner than the groups. But is there is anything else I can do, either with board configuration, or maybe even conditioning of the sound booth power circuits, that might help this? Or if the higher end boards will have lower noise floors due to better circuitry? Thanks. John
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Sound Engineer/Designer Local school and community theater Redwood City, CA |
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Quote:
Andre |
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If I remember correctly you are using Mackie srm 450's as your mains. These have an input that can work with line level all the way down to mic level. To keep the noise floor low, you need to get the levels up in the mixer so you are not running down in the "mud". Routing groups to mix on some mixers adds additional electronics into the path.
A couple of things you could look at: Get a splitter on the outputs, and run your mix to cd record into a compressor When I have been doing a record of a simple number of outputs(vs a full split with dedicated mixer for recording) I use a whirlwind Matrix Mixer, it allows for 4 inputs to create any combination of 4 outputs or 4 direct thru's. This allows me to create a combined mix of the 4 outs. Look at ebay item 370003051861 as an example http://www.whirlwindusa.com/usaudio01.html scroll down to the mix 44 As I mentioned above, get all your levels in the mixer UP and attenuate the inputs on the mackies to support it, so you are sending a higher level signal thru/out of the mixer Sharyn Last edited by SHARYNF; August 4th, 2008 at 08:29 PM.. |
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Thanks for the info Sharon -- that Whirlwind mixer is interesting.
Unfortunately the problem is not with the PA ... I agree that I should probably turn down the Mackies a bit (they're at 12 o'clock right now ... probably could be a little lower). But the PA is not the worst problem -- it's my recoding out of board. I actually am using two of the output busses through a compressor and into the recorder ... the compressor does a great job of curbing the peaks and preventing digital clipping (which sounds terrible). The noise I am finding is I think in the mix bus. If I push the mix fader up to zero I get a lot more noise than if I lower it down and raise the input channel fader levels. From adjusting the various "links in the chain" it seems like each mix bus adds a level of noise. So I can't just push the mix levels up, or else the noise will increase. I was hoping the move from a Mackie CFX to a Soundcraft board would result in lower noise floor ... looks like that's not completely true (ugh). If the theater had $8k to burn right now I'd probably call up FullCompass and order an LS9-32 and be done with this ...! By the way, I just bought parts to solder up my own splitters for the purpose you suggested -- in addition to providing a recording tap, it will also allow me to convert the L, R and M XLR output jacks into TRS so I can run all TRS cables from the mixer outs to the EQs. -- John
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Sound Engineer/Designer Local school and community theater Redwood City, CA |
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Fyi, for reference I've included URLs to two clips from different performances:
(Group-To-Mix) http://insidesalesforce.com/Hillbarn/grouptomix.mp3 (Mix-Only) http://insidesalesforce.com/Hillbarn/mixonly.mp3 The "group to mix" clip was recorded with the input channels routing through Group 1/2, and then Group 1/2 routed to Mix. I recorded off of the Mix outputs. "Mix only" was with the input channels routing directly to Mix. I included the band playoff at the beginning so you could get a volume reference. In the Mix-only version I also pulled down the PA so the wireless faders were running hotter -- but in both tracks the band should be at roughly the same level, to the two tracks should be comparable recording volume. In the Mix-only version you will notice more reverb -- I had that turned up as well ... another difference that hopefully won't detract from hearing the noise floor on these clips. If you listen towards the end of the track after the ballgame on TV has been turned off, you'll hear the level of the noise floor and the difference between the two clips. So, the Mix-only clip has the noise floor to a tolerable level for me ... it isn't distracting when I turn up the volume to hear the dialogue more clearly. The noise floor on the "group to mix" clip IS distracting. I am curious as to your thoughts on these clips, and how this compares to recording you guys have done. Thanks. John
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Sound Engineer/Designer Local school and community theater Redwood City, CA Last edited by jkowtko; August 5th, 2008 at 08:46 AM.. |
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The LX-7 is not a noisy board. I have used one many times for live music broadcasts. The source of the noise is improper gain structure, starting with the mic preamps and going through the whole console and on to the speakers. One clue would be that the console meters are barely registering when your music is fairly loud. A look at preamp levels with the PFL meter will also show them low.
As Sharyn said, if you are driving SRM 450's chances are you have the mic preamps running too low because the speakers are too sensitive. Then, to get the level you need to the recorder you are making up the gain in later stages. That's a no-no. Always get the gain up to proper level right at the start of the signal chain. I would make some 10 to 20 dB balanced, resistor pads to put on the speaker inputs. That will get the console outputs up to average around +4 dBu, and peaks up around +18 dBu, where the console is designed to run. Also, your recording really needs its own mix. The dialog seems too low compared to the music. I would use post-fader aux busses to do a recording mix. That will allow you to change the proportions of various elements, but still follows your mix faders to keep operation simple on the fly. |
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derekleffew (August 8th, 2008) | ||
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