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Nov 19th, 2005, 02:42 PM
#1
Thread Starter
Hyperactive Member
Microphones
Hello,
I have an Optimus Unidirectional Dynamic Microphone (something similar, but not the same like http://support.radioshack.com/suppor...c61/61692.pdf). The differences are minor in the specifications. I'm trying to hook this up to my computer. I have all the correct cables to plug it in, but when I try to record it, the volume is really low, even though I have all my sound settings high. The question is: [b] is this a "soundcard problem" or a "microphone problem"? When I hook in a CD player through line in, the sound is normal/loud. Same thing goes for a normal talking microphone (made for computers). Are the Optimus Microphones not made for digital (computer) environments? Or is my sound card struggling on these microphones? My soundcard is just a general Creative Live! SoundBlaster card. I'll have more specs when I find them, sorry.
Thanks in advance,
alacritous
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Nov 19th, 2005, 03:32 PM
#2
Thread Starter
Hyperactive Member
Re: Microphones
I went to a local CompUSA and one of their employees said that if we put the microphone cord into the microphone jack, instead of the line in, it would be louder. And of course, it was. Although, we have two Optimus microphones, so we can't have stereo. So, do companies make sound cards with a left AND right microphone jack?
alacritous
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Nov 19th, 2005, 05:04 PM
#3
Fanatic Member
Re: Microphones
Hi,
bare in mind that mics are MONO not stereo and dont have channell output the same as speakers do, so try different outputs and inputs on your sound car, eg line in, mix out ETC.
ta
Kai
As the information I give is useful in its nature, consider using the RATE POST feature located on the bottom left of this post please..
A few things that make a good Developer a Great One.
Methodical and a thorough approach to research and design inevitably leads to success.
Forward thinking is the key to Flow of control.
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Think Freely out of the "Box" you're in..... You will soar to better heights.
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Nov 19th, 2005, 05:47 PM
#4
Thread Starter
Hyperactive Member
Re: Microphones
Well, I already said though that line in doesn't produce enough volume, remember? So, that's not an option.
I know that microphone is mono, that's why I'm looking for a sound card that has perhaps 2 microphone inputs, if there is one. If not, I'm looking for any other solution.
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Nov 19th, 2005, 05:52 PM
#5
Fanatic Member
Re: Microphones
Hi,
Ok then..
If it volume on the line jack isnt waht you want, and there are no other options, why not look at a mic with a bigger output/bigger amplifier/slightly more sensetive?
Kai
As the information I give is useful in its nature, consider using the RATE POST feature located on the bottom left of this post please..
A few things that make a good Developer a Great One.
Methodical and a thorough approach to research and design inevitably leads to success.
Forward thinking is the key to Flow of control.
Never test in the design environment, always test in real time, you get the REAL results.
CBSE & OOSE are the same animal, they just require different techniques, and thinking.
SEO is a globe of objectives, SE rankings is an end to a means for these objectives, not part of them.
The key to good design is explicit attention to both detail and response.
Think Freely out of the "Box" you're in..... You will soar to better heights.
Kai Hirst - MSCE, MCDBA, MCSD, MCP, MCAP, MSCT
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Nov 19th, 2005, 08:48 PM
#6
Re: Microphones
Inside of the Mixer (in XP) if you add the microphone, and click Advanced, you will have a check box that says "Boost" which is a small pre-amp for the signal.
Your only other option would to get a system that has a pre-amp built into it, and plug the line-out's of it into the line-in's of your sound card. Look at a cheap DJ mixer that has 4 mike/line/phono jacks. A phono jack is a very high powered pre-amp, and prolly won't do what you want with a microphone plugged in. The benefit is that you can pan each channel to the left or right side of your soundcard, and then record it.
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Nov 22nd, 2005, 05:42 PM
#7
Thread Starter
Hyperactive Member
Re: Microphones
Yeah I figured out the boost. That works fine, but only for a mono channel. So for stereo, I've kind of narrowed it down to having to get hardware, which is a bummer. So ya it's definitely hardware and not the microphones.
Thanks,
alacritous
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