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Getting an XLR mic to feed into a computer mic input
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Regarding the guitar going through the mixing board I have tested it and it works fine (for my ears at least). I was playing along with "Band In A Box" as well and it sounds much better through both my guitar amps (again for my ears at least). By the end of June we will have a test done with drums, bass, guitar and guitar to see what happens. One model 2 feeds the guitar amps (up to 4 of them if needed so we all hear the same mix - including the audience). I am trying to avoid the complaints I keep hearing (for many years now) from the member's of my friend's classic rock band (we can't hear each other and we don't know if the audience is hearing us correctly). If needed I can set an amp up for the drummer so he can set the volume to his liking. So potentially 1 for audience, 2 up front pointing back at us and 1 for the drummer. For the demo recording the other model 2 feeds the old notebook computer to do the recording (I can blend one or more mikes out front for the recording with an addition input tapped of the first model 2 for a direct sound). It should be an interesting experiment.
Originally posted by g1 View PostI get the impression that any mono source assigned to both outputs like that will "move" when panned, so I still am not convinced this is a stereo mic. Are those output channels not considered (or assigned) left and right?
http://www.mediacollege.com/audio/co...jack-2xRCA.gif
It has to be feeding through this schematic to the speakers as left and right. The input jack has to be wired for stereo inside the computer. I moved that mike to all 6 input channels and panned each one for the same result so by the time I got to the 6th one it fully registered in my mind that it was panning to the two speakers. But I would like to know if audacity can record this on a left and right track.
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Originally posted by Richard View PostI fooled around a bit and got a nasty distortion (and not the good kind of nasty) but if yours is copacetic with guitars then you're all good. I would just not want to set up and get that nasty surprise.
It is the same feeding the mixer into the computer mic input. You have to set the levels down a fair bit. On the desktop I choose the line input instead.
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