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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Hi everyone,
I know this is a very simple question, so hopefully someone can answer it for me real quick (I looked through the forums but couldn't find this info anywhere, probably because it's very basic). I'm upgrading from a simple A/D-D/A box to a mixer combined with the M- audio Delta 1010 for multitracking. Our tracking room will be ~30 feet from the control room on the other end of the house, so I was about to buy some 100 ft. balanced mic cables to give us plenty of room for positioning mics. But now, I'm considering getting a 50 ft. snake and some shorter mic cables to chain to the snake for each room. My question is whether or not the chaining of the mic cables reduces sound quality at all, or if this is just standard practice in most studios. Thanks very much. |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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wrote ...
My question is whether or not the chaining of the mic cables reduces sound quality at all, If you are using halfway decent cables, it does not "reduce the sound quality at all". or if this is just standard practice in most studios. It is standard practice in both studios and on location recording and reinforcement. Buy decent cables and don't worry about it. |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 13:48:09 -0700, mattcoffay wrote:
Hi everyone, I know this is a very simple question, so hopefully someone can answer it for me real quick (I looked through the forums but couldn't find this info anywhere, probably because it's very basic). I'm upgrading from a simple A/D-D/A box to a mixer combined with the M- audio Delta 1010 for multitracking. Our tracking room will be ~30 feet from the control room on the other end of the house, so I was about to buy some 100 ft. balanced mic cables to give us plenty of room for positioning mics. But now, I'm considering getting a 50 ft. snake and some shorter mic cables to chain to the snake for each room. My question is whether or not the chaining of the mic cables reduces sound quality at all, or if this is just standard practice in most studios. It is standard practice to use a snake. Keep everything balanced and get a good quality multicore and you won't have problems. Eight 100 ft cables might end up getting tangled up with each other too. It's nicer to only have the cables on the floor that you are using for the session. Thanks very much. |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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On Jul 4, 5:14*pm, philicorda
wrote: On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 13:48:09 -0700, mattcoffay wrote: Hi everyone, I know this is a very simple question, so hopefully someone can answer it for me real quick (I looked through the forums but couldn't find this info anywhere, probably because it's very basic). I'm upgrading from a simple A/D-D/A box to a mixer combined with the M- audio Delta 1010 for multitracking. *Our tracking room will be ~30 feet from the control room on the other end of the house, so I was about to buy some 100 ft. balanced mic cables to give us plenty of room for positioning mics. *But now, I'm considering getting a 50 ft. snake and some shorter mic cables to chain to the snake for each room. My question is whether or not the chaining of the mic cables reduces sound quality at all, or if this is just standard practice in most studios. It is standard practice to use a snake. Keep everything balanced and get a good quality multicore and you won't have problems. Eight 100 ft cables might end up getting tangled up with each other too. It's nicer to only have the cables on the floor that you are using for the session. Thanks very much. Cool, thanks for your replies. Also, while I have your attention, one more question: I'll be running a couple of aux mixes from the mixer into the tracking room and into a headphone amp (I've got one amp with multiple ins and outs) for monitor mixes. What kind of cable would be good for this? I had assumed a 50 ft. TRS cable, but after looking on eBay and such for cables a 50 ft. TRS seems very uncommon, whereas there are lots of 50 ft. "speaker cables"--I wasn't sure what the difference would be (besides that the speaker cables appear to be mono?) or how it might affect my ability to run the monitor mixes into the headphone amp. Thanks again! |
#6
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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On Fri, 04 Jul 2008 14:39:37 -0700, mattcoffay wrote:
Cool, thanks for your replies. Also, while I have your attention, one more question: I'll be running a couple of aux mixes from the mixer into the tracking room and into a headphone amp (I've got one amp with multiple ins and outs) for monitor mixes. What kind of cable would be good for this? I had assumed a 50 ft. TRS cable, but after looking on eBay and such for cables a 50 ft. TRS seems very uncommon, whereas there are lots of 50 ft. "speaker cables"--I wasn't sure what the difference would be (besides that the speaker cables appear to be mono?) or how it might affect my ability to run the monitor mixes into the headphone amp. I'd send the headphone mixes down the same multicore as the mics. It does not cause noticeable interference. Thanks again! |
#7
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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"Richard Crowley" wrote:
wrote ... My question is whether or not the chaining of the mic cables reduces sound quality at all, If you are using halfway decent cables, it does not "reduce the sound quality at all". or if this is just standard practice in most studios. It is standard practice in both studios and on location recording and reinforcement. Buy decent cables and don't worry about it. Consider getting a snake with a box at the input end. It really expedites a setup. -- ~ ~ Roy "If you notice the sound, it's wrong!" |
#8
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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wrote:
I'm upgrading from a simple A/D-D/A box to a mixer combined with the M- audio Delta 1010 for multitracking. Our tracking room will be ~30 feet from the control room on the other end of the house, so I was about to buy some 100 ft. balanced mic cables to give us plenty of room for positioning mics. But now, I'm considering getting a 50 ft. snake and some shorter mic cables to chain to the snake for each room. My question is whether or not the chaining of the mic cables reduces sound quality at all, or if this is just standard practice in most studios. This is standard practice. The reason we run balanced low-Z lines is that we can run thousands of feet of mike cable without any problem. The only times it becomes an issue is when you have very high capacitance mike cable (like star-quad), combined with microphones that don't like driving capacitive loads (like RCA ribbons). --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#9
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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On Jul 4, 4:48 pm, wrote:
My question is whether or not the chaining of the mic cables reduces sound quality at all Silly boy! There's nothing you can do that won't affect the sound quality in some way. But if we worried about little things like that, we'd never get anything done. A snake is a very good idea. It will make your setup a lot neater and will reduce clutter in they house when you don't clean up after a session. Go for it. |
#10
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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On Jul 4, 5:39 pm, wrote:
I'll be running a couple of aux mixes from the mixer into the tracking room and into a headphone amp (I've got one amp with multiple ins and outs) for monitor mixes. What kind of cable would be good for this? Most commercially made snakes have "return" lines as well as connectors for your mic cables. You can use those. Quit worrying about cables. They just work, as long as they're wired correctly. |
#11
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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On Jul 4, 5:39*pm, wrote:
I'll be running a couple of aux mixes from the mixer into the tracking room and into a headphone amp (I've got one amp with multiple ins and outs) for monitor mixes. *What kind of cable would be good for this? I had assumed a 50 ft. TRS cable, but after looking on eBay and such for cables a 50 ft. TRS seems very uncommon, whereas there are lots of 50 ft. "speaker cables"--I wasn't sure what the difference would be (besides that the speaker cables appear to be mono?) or how it might affect my ability to run the monitor mixes into the headphone amp. Mic Snakes will typically say something like "20 sends 4 returns." It's all the same in the multicore cable, just the returns are the opposite gender of the sends, or sometimes they are 1/4" connectors instead of XLR's. The returns are typically for monitor mixes for live gigs, or headphone mixes/talkback signal in the studio. But if you don't have returns built in, you can just use back to back adapters to change genders on the ends. It's also not an unusual practice to send headphone mixes down the returns after the amp, and keep the amp/amps in the control room. On the studio end you plug into the returns with a box/boxes that go around the studio floor that guys jack their headphones into. If the returns are balanced 1/4" it's easy to send stereo mixes to the studio, if they aren't you need to wire your headphone breakout and use two 1/4" inputs for the left and right. For a small room with a box with 4 unbalanced 1/4" returns, you might have a choice of (for example), 4 mono mixes, or 1 stereo and 2 mono mixes, or 2 stereo mixes. If people sing with one ear off anyway, mono mixes are fine. Will Miho NY TV/Audio Post/Music/Live Sound Guy "The large print giveth and the small print taketh away..." Tom Waits |
#12
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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#13
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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"Soundhaspriority" wrote:
Headphone level is higher than line level, which is higher than mike level. Crosstalk might be unobvious in sound reinforcement or garage band recording, yet show up unexpectedly in other situations. So why risk it? Bob Morein (310) 237-6511 Bob ~ In practice, headphone level usually is not higher than line level. When I plug my phones into a +4 dBu output, it's louder than I find comfortable by at least 6 dB. Still, the rule of thumb for crosstalk in multicore cable keeps level differences greater than 40 dB from sharing the same snake. When mics are close to their sources, outputs easily can be above the -40 dBu range. Janice Joplin's voice was about -10 coming out of an EV 635A! A top-fuel dragster passing the same mic placed trackside measured +4 dBu! -- ~ ~ Roy "If you notice the sound, it's wrong!" |
#14
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Posted to rec.audio.pro,aus.hi-fi,rec.audio.tech,rec.music.classical.recordings
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Soundhaspriority wrote:
wrote in message ... Bob ~ In practice, headphone level usually is not higher than line level. When I plug my phones into a +4 dBu output, it's louder than I find comfortable by at least 6 dB. Still, the rule of thumb for crosstalk in multicore cable keeps level differences greater than 40 dB from sharing the same snake. When mics are close to their sources, outputs easily can be above the -40 dBu range. Janice Joplin's voice was about -10 coming out of an EV 635A! A top-fuel dragster passing the same mic placed trackside measured +4 dBu! I don't know about anything "in practice". I read all about recording and know what's best from the literature. "I don't really have a replacement career, it's a very gnawing thing." Robert Morein Dresher, PA (310) 237-6511 (215) 646-4894 The information I try to provide here is derived from four decades of studying the literature and applying it in the very real world of TV audio systems ~ their design, development, maintenance, modification and *operation*. Here are two example of some things I did in 1969: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bsGm-DqbmSA http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XkMKRxn5x14 Both are live to videotape. And ... I've learned a great deal *since* 1969. ;-) -- ~ ~ Roy "If you notice the sound, it's wrong!" |
#15
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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On Jul 4, 3:48 pm, wrote:
Hi everyone, I know this is a very simple question, so hopefully someone can answer it for me real quick (I looked through the forums but couldn't find this info anywhere, probably because it's very basic). I'm upgrading from a simple A/D-D/A box to a mixer combined with the M- audio Delta 1010 for multitracking. Our tracking room will be ~30 feet from the control room on the other end of the house, so I was about to buy some 100 ft. balanced mic cables to give us plenty of room for positioning mics. But now, I'm considering getting a 50 ft. snake and some shorter mic cables to chain to the snake for each room. My question is whether or not the chaining of the mic cables reduces sound quality at all, or if this is just standard practice in most studios. Thanks very much. I reccomend Gepco International cables. They are a true manufacturer of audio cable. They make a real nice digital snake cable. You can buy it from them bulk or have them make the snake box with connectors to your specifications. |
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