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#1
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Hi there,
I wonder how jitter would sound like... Actually, I had my new mic preamp connected to my computer (w/ S/PDIF) and there was some noise, but only when recording an distorted guitar (using a SM57). And I'm not sure if this could be "jitter sound" or something like distortion by overdriving the SM57 in the pre (I had to turn the gain down low since it was a very hot signal). I don't use any clock signal to sync the pre (dbx386) and I'm even not sure if the cable is a fully-qualified 75ohm RCA thingy or just an over-priced RCA audio cable with gold connectors (was around 13$). Any suggestions or experiences with jitter? Thank you very much. Nudge -- Nudge // PCS Records Studio Leipzig http://studio.lieber-media.de |
#2
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"Nudge" wrote in message
Hi there, I wonder how jitter would sound like... http://www.pcabx.com/technical/jitter_power/index.htm |
#3
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Thanks for the hint.
It was no jitter, then in my case. Kind Regards Nudge Arny Krueger wrote: "Nudge" wrote in message Hi there, I wonder how jitter would sound like... http://www.pcabx.com/technical/jitter_power/index.htm -- Nudge // PCS Records Studio Leipzig http://studio.lieber-media.de |
#4
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In article , Nudge wrote:
I wonder how jitter would sound like... Jitter causes sidebands to appear on the side of each tone. This makes things sound "fuzzy" and "less clear" for the most part. You can think of what jitter does as a more subtle version of tape flutter. Actually, I had my new mic preamp connected to my computer (w/ S/PDIF) and there was some noise, but only when recording an distorted guitar (using a SM57). And I'm not sure if this could be "jitter sound" or something like distortion by overdriving the SM57 in the pre (I had to turn the gain down low since it was a very hot signal). Jitter has nothing to do with any of this. Jitter does not cause noise. It causes a sort of distortion, but one where the distortion products are very close in frequency to the original tone. It is a fairly subtle thing in comparison with what you are experiencing. You should like you're clipping the preamp. Put a pad on the preamp input and stop worrying so much. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#5
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Scott Dorsey wrote:
Actually, I had my new mic preamp connected to my computer (w/ S/PDIF) and there was some noise, but only when recording an distorted guitar (using a SM57). And I'm not sure if this could be "jitter sound" or something like distortion by overdriving the SM57 in the pre (I had to turn the gain down low since it was a very hot signal). Jitter has nothing to do with any of this. Jitter does not cause noise. It causes a sort of distortion, but one where the distortion products are very close in frequency to the original tone. It is a fairly subtle thing in comparison with what you are experiencing. You should like you're clipping the preamp. Put a pad on the preamp input and stop worrying so much. --scott OK, I did. I turned the pre's -20dB pad on and had the analog input well below -6dB, varying the gain and digital output volume, and kept it safely under -6db, sometimes under -12dB. But it was still there. And now I'm really worrying. ![]() I would like you to listen to it: http://www.lieber-media.de/mathias/s...x386_noise.mp3 (~ 700 KB) You can hear that especially at sec. 14 and 15. It's a high-pitch crispy noise. Could you give me your opinion about it? Thank you very much. Nudge -- Nudge // PCS Records Studio Leipzig http://studio.lieber-media.de |
#6
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#7
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"Mike Rivers" wrote in message
news:znr1102950485k@trad In article writes: I would like you to listen to it: I don't normally do this, but since it was a fairly short file I took a listen. It sounds like a pretty consistently distorted guitar to me and I can't tell any diference in the sound around 14-15 seconds. Either something is getting lost in the translation or I'm just not sensitive to the subtlties of horribly distorted guitar. Try the same thing with a clean guitar sound. Ditto. It looks there is a certain note that when played, changes the texture of the sound. However, isn't changing the texture the desired outcome from playing a different note? |
#8
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In article znr1102950485k@trad, Mike Rivers wrote:
In article writes: I would like you to listen to it: I don't normally do this, but since it was a fairly short file I took a listen. It sounds like a pretty consistently distorted guitar to me and I can't tell any diference in the sound around 14-15 seconds. Either something is getting lost in the translation or I'm just not sensitive to the subtlties of horribly distorted guitar. Try the same thing with a clean guitar sound. OR, move the microphone out to the edge of the speaker where it won't get as bright a sound from the amp. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#9
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Scott Dorsey wrote:
In article znr1102950485k@trad, Mike Rivers wrote: In article writes: I would like you to listen to it: I don't normally do this, but since it was a fairly short file I took a listen. It sounds like a pretty consistently distorted guitar to me and I can't tell any diference in the sound around 14-15 seconds. Either something is getting lost in the translation or I'm just not sensitive to the subtlties of horribly distorted guitar. Try the same thing with a clean guitar sound. OR, move the microphone out to the edge of the speaker where it won't get as bright a sound from the amp. --scott About the mic sound: It was the first time I tried the miking method as described on the shure website: dead center, 4" away from the grill. That should give an "well-balanced, natural" tone. Indeed, it's rather bright. http://www.shurenotes.com/issue6/article.asp?flash=true About the noise: I took another track with the mic more on the edge: it's more obvious. But the real problem is: That problem occurs only in the digital domain. I tried the analog output and there, the crispy noise doesn't exist. Even with a somewhat hotter signal. That's why I thought it was jitter. It isn't, as I learned. I have some options left: - dropouts caused by a bad RCA cable - dropouts caused by bad latency settings/buffer sizes - bad syncing mode (Sonar set to "Full Midi Chase") I have prepared yet another mp3 using a clean guitar, played by someone else. It's about 300KB and lasts only 7 seconds. I don't want to waste your time and I appreciate your help very much. Believe me, in this sample, it's absolutely obvious. http://www.lieber-media.de/mathias/s...386_noise2.mp3 I'm sorry for any inconvinience. PLEASE HELP ME! ;-) Kind Regards Nudge -- Nudge // PCS Records Studio Leipzig http://studio.lieber-media.de |
#10
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In article , Nudge wrote:
About the mic sound: It was the first time I tried the miking method as described on the shure website: dead center, 4" away from the grill. That should give an "well-balanced, natural" tone. Indeed, it's rather bright. http://www.shurenotes.com/issue6/article.asp?flash=true No, that gives a very bright tone. Turn the amp down and put your head in front of it. Stick a finger in one ear while somebody plays with the other, and listen to how the amp sounds as you move around it. It sounds different in the center than it does on the edge, and it sounds even more different in back. About the noise: I took another track with the mic more on the edge: it's more obvious. But the real problem is: That problem occurs only in the digital domain. I tried the analog output and there, the crispy noise doesn't exist. Even with a somewhat hotter signal. That's why I thought it was jitter. It isn't, as I learned. How do you know? I have some options left: - dropouts caused by a bad RCA cable - dropouts caused by bad latency settings/buffer sizes - bad syncing mode (Sonar set to "Full Midi Chase") Bad synching mode would sound reasonable. First of all, try recording a voice or something that is easy enough to tell if it is distorting, rather than a guitar amp. Secondly, try recording from the S-PDIF output on a CD player. If you can do that properly, you should be okay to record from your A/D box. If you cannot, the problem is in your soundcard setup or software configuration. I have prepared yet another mp3 using a clean guitar, played by someone else. It's about 300KB and lasts only 7 seconds. I don't want to waste your time and I appreciate your help very much. Believe me, in this sample, it's absolutely obvious. http://www.lieber-media.de/mathias/s...386_noise2.mp3 I'm on a shell service. I can't listen to mp3s or look at graphics. But I'd bet that fiddling with your clock configuration will help a lot. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#12
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Nudge wrote:
But the real problem is: That problem occurs only in the digital domain. I tried the analog output and there, the crispy noise doesn't exist. Even with a somewhat hotter signal. I am confused. How do you listen to something _in the digital domain_? Do you have DAC's built into your head? I have to listen in the analog domain because I don't have digital ears. So please articulate more clearly the actual circumstances and attendant signal routing for when you do hear it and for when you do not hear it. -- ha |
#13
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hank alrich wrote:
Nudge wrote: I am confused. How do you listen to something _in the digital domain_? Do you have DAC's built into your head? I have to listen in the analog domain because I don't have digital ears. So please articulate more clearly the actual circumstances and attendant signal routing for when you do hear it and for when you do not hear it. My dbx 386 mic pre has S/PDIF out as well as analog out. I can take the analog output and go into my A/D card (Terratec EWS 88MT). This way the problem doesn't occur. But if I connect the S/PDIF output of the mic pre with the S/PDIF in of the A/D card, I hear that noise. Of course, I listen to a analog signal that goes through the EWS88MT D/A again into my mixer and headphones. ;-) Kind Regards Nudge -- Nudge // PCS Records Studio Leipzig http://studio.lieber-media.de |
#14
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![]() Mike Rivers wrote: In article writes: I would like you to listen to it: I don't normally do this, but since it was a fairly short file I took a listen. It sounds like a pretty consistently distorted guitar to me and I can't tell any diference in the sound around 14-15 seconds. Either something is getting lost in the translation or I'm just not sensitive to the subtlties of horribly distorted guitar. Try the same thing with a clean guitar sound. I had a listen too. If there's anything subtle I'm sure conversion to mp3 has masked it. I didn't hear anything odd. Try a wav file next time ? Graham |
#15
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![]() Nudge wrote: Scott Dorsey wrote: In article znr1102950485k@trad, Mike Rivers wrote: In article writes: I would like you to listen to it: I don't normally do this, but since it was a fairly short file I took a listen. It sounds like a pretty consistently distorted guitar to me and I can't tell any diference in the sound around 14-15 seconds. Either something is getting lost in the translation or I'm just not sensitive to the subtlties of horribly distorted guitar. Try the same thing with a clean guitar sound. OR, move the microphone out to the edge of the speaker where it won't get as bright a sound from the amp. --scott About the mic sound: It was the first time I tried the miking method as described on the shure website: dead center, 4" away from the grill. That should give an "well-balanced, natural" tone. Indeed, it's rather bright. http://www.shurenotes.com/issue6/article.asp?flash=true About the noise: I took another track with the mic more on the edge: it's more obvious. But the real problem is: That problem occurs only in the digital domain. I tried the analog output and there, the crispy noise doesn't exist. Even with a somewhat hotter signal. That's why I thought it was jitter. It isn't, as I learned. I have some options left: - dropouts caused by a bad RCA cable - dropouts caused by bad latency settings/buffer sizes - bad syncing mode (Sonar set to "Full Midi Chase") I have prepared yet another mp3 using a clean guitar, played by someone else. It's about 300KB and lasts only 7 seconds. I don't want to waste your time and I appreciate your help very much. Believe me, in this sample, it's absolutely obvious. http://www.lieber-media.de/mathias/s...386_noise2.mp3 I'm sorry for any inconvinience. PLEASE HELP ME! ;-) Ok, I hear some low level 'granularity' / buzziness but only on the right channel. It may well be the **** onboard audio on this PC or my headphones are shot. If I have time I'll try it on another PC. Graham |
#16
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#17
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![]() "Mike Rivers" wrote in message news:znr1103027291k@trad... In article writes: My dbx 386 mic pre has S/PDIF out as well as analog out. I can take the analog output and go into my A/D card (Terratec EWS 88MT). This way the problem doesn't occur. But if I connect the S/PDIF output of the mic pre with the S/PDIF in of the A/D card, I hear that noise. So you're always monitoring the analog output of the Terratec card, sometimes fed from its analog input, sometimes fed from the digital input. But the examples you've been posting have all been recorded through the same path, so it's not surprising that they sound OK (since they sound OK under some conditions at your studio). If you wanted to illustrate what happens when you monitor the digital output of your preamp through the D/A converter in your sound card, you'd have to re-record the analog output of your sound card. Given the situation, I'd say you have a clocking problem. Check the Terratec driver control panel and, when you're using the digital input, make sure it's getting its word clock from the digital input, and not the internal clock. I'll bet that's your problem. Or the A/D on the 386 just sounds bad. I missed the beginning of this thread, so I don't know what the specific problem is supposed to be but that clip does sound shrill (aside from the guitar being out of tune) in a way that reminds me of a blackface ADAT. -jw |
#18
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Nudge wrote:
My dbx 386 mic pre has S/PDIF out as well as analog out. I can take the analog output and go into my A/D card (Terratec EWS 88MT). This way the problem doesn't occur. But if I connect the S/PDIF output of the mic pre with the S/PDIF in of the A/D card, I hear that noise. That could well be a clocking issue. Re-examine how you've set the devices when going the digital route. Of course, I listen to a analog signal that goes through the EWS88MT D/A again into my mixer and headphones. ;-) Good. g -- ha |
#19
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Mike Rivers wrote:
In article writes: My dbx 386 mic pre has S/PDIF out as well as analog out. I can take the analog output and go into my A/D card (Terratec EWS 88MT). This way the problem doesn't occur. But if I connect the S/PDIF output of the mic pre with the S/PDIF in of the A/D card, I hear that noise. Given the situation, I'd say you have a clocking problem. Check the Terratec driver control panel and, when you're using the digital input, make sure it's getting its word clock from the digital input, and not the internal clock. I'll bet that's your problem. Thank everybody for the hints. I will check the clocking next. Kind Regards Nudge -- Nudge // PCS Records Studio Leipzig http://studio.lieber-media.de |
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