INLINE MIC PAD: HELP

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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.
 
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 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 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.

My pad is 3 pin. So i am trying to figure out how to hook it up, not necessarily where. I know i need it before the preamp
 
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 amp
 
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.
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 wrong
 
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.
 
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.
Makes sense, so the preamp is inside the mic..
 
What tube mic are we talking about, and what are you plugging the mic into?
I'm not understanding what preamp you are talking about?
 
Makes sense, so the preamp is inside the mic..
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/

In short, condenser mics usually have some circuitry built-in, but only enough to get the signal to something suitable for handing off to an actual mic pre-amp. That internal tube circuitry is what the box you mentioned is providing power for, probably. Unless you're using other gear not mentioned or we're misunderstanding, your interface is providing the pre-amp, and is likely what's being overloaded.
 
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