Smash
Hack
I purchased an inline pad to kick down the dbs between my mic and preamp, but the connections are xlr 3 pin on the pad, and my mic is a tube mic, so I have the 7 pin connector there.
The mic is a tube mic, so has 7 pins. The preamp has 7 pins from that side, it goes to three pin AFTER the preamp to the interface.If you've been sending a 3-pin into your interface (after coming from a power supply box or something?), I'd stick the pad right before the interface input. So mic -> power supply -> pad -> interface input.
If i stick it there, i feel like the preamp still gets overloaded from the volume of my ampIf you've been sending a 3-pin into your interface (after coming from a power supply box or something?), I'd stick the pad right before the interface input. So mic -> power supply -> pad -> interface input.
The right pad is critical to limit this electron heavy flow dayIf i stick it there, i feel like the preamp still gets overloaded from the volume of my amp
I have been doing research and maybe you are right. A lot of people recommend it between the mic and preamp, but some say they like the overloaded preamp and want it before the ada conversion...thanks for the help. I thought about it when i saw that it would fit there, but just assumed it was wrongIf you've been sending a 3-pin into your interface (after coming from a power supply box or something?), I'd stick the pad right before the interface input. So mic -> power supply -> pad -> interface input.
Makes sense, so the preamp is inside the mic..Not sure what tube mic you're using, but the box that the mic connects to with the 7 pin connector is the power supply for the mic, not a preamp. The 3 pin connector coming out of that box is the raw mic signal. Put the pad here between the power supply and the interface/preamp.
The reason for the 7 pins from the box to the tube mic is 3 pins for the audio signal, and 4 pins for the voltage that the tube needs to operate.
No, I think @fusedbrain is referring to what this sweetwater article calls a "head amp": https://www.sweetwater.com/insync/what-is-a-tube-microphone/Makes sense, so the preamp is inside the mic..