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"Jake Fallon" wrote in message
om... I own an M-Audio Firewire 1814 interface and am pleased with it, however, If i try to record a mono signal (48 kHz - 16 bit), i notice that the maximum signal that I can record is only -6db. Even with the mic pre turned all the way up, i the computer acts as if there is some sort of limiter in the signal path even though there definatly is not. (I have my Rhodes NT-2 mic plugged directly into the M-Audio Firewire 1814's front XLR input. The 1814 is then plugged directly into my computer via firewire.) Now, when I monitor my recording levels (using Adobe Audition), i notice that even with the mic pre turned all the way up (yes, the preamp is clipping now), the computer somehow is limiting the signal to -6db when it should be peaking out on the computer. What in the world is causing this? A workaround that I've figured out is to record a STEREO signal (48 kHz - 16 bit) and now I get full headroom, but why can't I simply record a mono signal and have it work properly? Also, I've noticed this on my home studio and on our studio at the office. Both machines are running XP pro and are plenty fast. What's going on is that when you record in mono, the software assumes that you have signal coming in both channels and want to sum those down to a mono signal. If you did that with two full-scale signals, the sum would be up to 6dB too hot and clip like crazy, so it automatically pads each signal down 6dB. Of course, since you don't really have something coming in the second channel, you're just getting the first channel's signal 6dB down (plus a tiny bit of noise from the inactive second channel). You've found the proper work-around, or at least the one I use. The second step is not to save the stereo file, but rather to highlight the channel that actually has signal in it and export that to a file. (Alt-F-E, I believe.) Now you have a nice mono file with only one extra step involved, which'll take all of 2 seconds. Be sure, after you do this, to click someplace in the center of the screen so that both channels are active again; otherwise the next take will be recorded only to the channel you previously highlighted -- 6dB down. PITA, yes, but that's how CoolEdit/Audition works. Many of the Windows editing programs I've seen work the same way. Peace, Paul |
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