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#1
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Hi,
I've got a question on how to connect a cd player to my studio monitors. I'm quite new to this, so I hope someone can help me out. The problem is this: I've got a stage piano and guitar connected through a mixer (TAPCO MIX120), to a set of active studio monitors (SAMSON Resolv 50a). I now want to connect a cd player, while I want to keep control of the left- and right-channel volume separately. The cd player has normal RCA output, can I plug these into two channels on the mixer directly? Any help would be great! atja |
#2
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"atja" wrote ...
I've got a question on how to connect a cd player to my studio monitors. I'm quite new to this, so I hope someone can help me out. The problem is this: I've got a stage piano and guitar connected through a mixer (TAPCO MIX120), to a set of active studio monitors (SAMSON Resolv 50a). I now want to connect a cd player, while I want to keep control of the left- and right-channel volume separately. The cd player has normal RCA output, can I plug these into two channels on the mixer directly? Sure. The line inputs are described by Tapco as compatible with consumer line-level output devices. If you want the left and right channels on different inputs, you may have to juggle cables and adapters, but it is a straightforward exercise. |
#3
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On Dec 5, 3:14 pm, "Richard Crowley" wrote:
"atja" wrote ... I've got a question on how to connect a cd player to my studio monitors. I'm quite new to this, so I hope someone can help me out. The problem is this: I've got a stage piano and guitar connected through a mixer (TAPCO MIX120), to a set of active studio monitors (SAMSON Resolv 50a). I now want to connect a cd player, while I want to keep control of the left- and right-channel volume separately. The cd player has normal RCA output, can I plug these into two channels on the mixer directly? Sure. The line inputs are described by Tapco as compatible with consumer line-level output devices. If you want the left and right channels on different inputs, you may have to juggle cables and adapters, but it is a straightforward exercise. Thanks for the (very quick) reply Richard! I've tried to just connect it this way (I used some plugs to put the RCA connectors into a channel on the mixer), but the sound quality is not optimal. The high tones sound as if they are damped. Any idea what can cause this? |
#4
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"atja" wrote ...
"Richard Crowley" wrote: "atja" wrote ... I've got a question on how to connect a cd player to my studio monitors. I'm quite new to this, so I hope someone can help me out. The problem is this: I've got a stage piano and guitar connected through a mixer (TAPCO MIX120), to a set of active studio monitors (SAMSON Resolv 50a). I now want to connect a cd player, while I want to keep control of the left- and right-channel volume separately. The cd player has normal RCA output, can I plug these into two channels on the mixer directly? Sure. The line inputs are described by Tapco as compatible with consumer line-level output devices. If you want the left and right channels on different inputs, you may have to juggle cables and adapters, but it is a straightforward exercise. Thanks for the (very quick) reply Richard! I've tried to just connect it this way (I used some plugs to put the RCA connectors into a channel on the mixer), but the sound quality is not optimal. The high tones sound as if they are damped. Any idea what can cause this? Time for the usual differential diagnosis exercises. The CD player sounds OK when plugged into something else? Other sources sound OK when plugged into those inputs? The cable works OK when used with other equipment? Does it sound OK of you are listening to only one channel? With only one channel plugged in, etc? Exactly how do you have it connected to the Tapco mixer? For example, are you using some kind of "Y-adapter" to combine left & right (etc.)? |
#5
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On Dec 5, 3:32 pm, "Richard Crowley" wrote:
"atja" wrote ... "Richard Crowley" wrote: "atja" wrote ... I've got a question on how to connect a cd player to my studio monitors. I'm quite new to this, so I hope someone can help me out. The problem is this: I've got a stage piano and guitar connected through a mixer (TAPCO MIX120), to a set of active studio monitors (SAMSON Resolv 50a). I now want to connect a cd player, while I want to keep control of the left- and right-channel volume separately. The cd player has normal RCA output, can I plug these into two channels on the mixer directly? Sure. The line inputs are described by Tapco as compatible with consumer line-level output devices. If you want the left and right channels on different inputs, you may have to juggle cables and adapters, but it is a straightforward exercise. Thanks for the (very quick) reply Richard! I've tried to just connect it this way (I used some plugs to put the RCA connectors into a channel on the mixer), but the sound quality is not optimal. The high tones sound as if they are damped. Any idea what can cause this? Time for the usual differential diagnosis exercises. The CD player sounds OK when plugged into something else? Other sources sound OK when plugged into those inputs? The cable works OK when used with other equipment? Does it sound OK of you are listening to only one channel? With only one channel plugged in, etc? Exactly how do you have it connected to the Tapco mixer? For example, are you using some kind of "Y-adapter" to combine left & right (etc.)? The connections in the 'exercises' all work ok, so it does not seem to be the cable or the inputs. I connected my monitors through the 'main out' connections on the mixer, with regular 1/4" cables. |
#6
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On Dec 5, 8:49 am, atja wrote:
I've got a stage piano and guitar connected through a mixer (TAPCO MIX120), to a set of active studio monitors (SAMSON Resolv 50a). I now want to connect a cd player, while I want to keep control of the left- and right-channel volume separately. The cd player has normal RCA output, can I plug these into two channels on the mixer directly? You'll want to plug those into two Line inputs, which means that either you'll need adapters for RCA-RCA cables or you'll need cables with RCA plugs on one end and 1/4" plugs on the other. I recommend the latter. Adapters are often unreliable. The first four channels of your mixer are "mono" so if you plugged into two of those, set the Pan full left on one channel and full right on the other, you'd have the CD player connected as you want it. The last four channels of your mixer are "stereo" which means they have two jacks per channel and you don't have separate knobs for the volume and tone of each channel, only a single volume control and a balance control like on a stereo receiver. You can use two stereo channels as if they were mono channels by plugging your CD player outputs into the Left jack (only ) of the two channels. Then the Pan control becomes a normal pan (like on the first four channels) and the level controls adjust the two channels individually. You don't have any EQ on those line input channels. You might have to make some executive decisions about what needs what amount of control. You don't get everything on every channel on a basic utility mixer like that. |
#7
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"atja" wrote ...
"Richard Crowley" wrote: Time for the usual differential diagnosis exercises. The CD player sounds OK when plugged into something else? Other sources sound OK when plugged into those inputs? The cable works OK when used with other equipment? Does it sound OK of you are listening to only one channel? With only one channel plugged in, etc? Exactly how do you have it connected to the Tapco mixer? For example, are you using some kind of "Y-adapter" to combine left & right (etc.)? The connections in the 'exercises' all work ok, so it does not seem to be the cable or the inputs. Then we can only conclude that your (unidentified) CD player is broken. I connected my monitors through the 'main out' connections on the mixer, with regular 1/4" cables. Should make no difference. I was asking only about the connection between the CD player and the mixer. |
#8
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On Dec 5, 6:41 pm, "Richard Crowley" wrote:
"atja" wrote ... "Richard Crowley" wrote: Time for the usual differential diagnosis exercises. The CD player sounds OK when plugged into something else? Other sources sound OK when plugged into those inputs? The cable works OK when used with other equipment? Does it sound OK of you are listening to only one channel? With only one channel plugged in, etc? Exactly how do you have it connected to the Tapco mixer? For example, are you using some kind of "Y-adapter" to combine left & right (etc.)? The connections in the 'exercises' all work ok, so it does not seem to be the cable or the inputs. Then we can only conclude that your (unidentified) CD player is broken. I connected my monitors through the 'main out' connections on the mixer, with regular 1/4" cables. Should make no difference. I was asking only about the connection between the CD player and the mixer. I'll try to check it with another CD player, to check if that is the problem. Thanks for all the quick help! |
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