evovch Posted March 22, 2016 Share Posted March 22, 2016 Hi all. I would really appreciate if someone from Line6 and having understanding of the internal processes will answer this questions. So basically I use Line6 POD HD Pro as an audio interface and FX loop. The chain is the following: Bass -> Bass Amp -> XLR line out -> POD HD Pro XLR front mic in (-> optionally a few pedals in the FX loop of the POD, but we can skip them) Evidently, my goal is to record with best signal/noise ratio and get no overdrive in the (pre-)amps, so I set to max possible gain on the bass head but keeping low enough not to produce any clipping. Then comes the bass head line out level and POD mic preamp level (I guess this is 'gain', not 'level') with additional posibility to do -20db using a small button near the XLR socket. I don't use this button, set the POD mic preamp level to min and rise the bass amp line out level again as high as possible such that I don't clip on mic input of POD. And here comes the question. With all these settings the recorging level is relatively low. I need to say that it is not very low, it is normal, but I would expect getting at least to, say, -2 db or 0 db when I clip at mic input. Currently the fast attack of a note, which produces slight clipping in the mic preamp will be recorded at peak of approx, -8 db or such. Why should I waste dynamic range? Are there any knobs to turn and get the signal back, but not increase the volume after digitization either in hardware or software. Regards, Egor. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jandrio Posted March 22, 2016 Share Posted March 22, 2016 http://line6.com/support/topic/17242-recording-over-usb/?do=findComment&comment=127230 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DunedinDragon Posted March 22, 2016 Share Posted March 22, 2016 You can make an adjustment in the operating system as is pointed out in the above link to raise your raw signal level, but I just want to point out that -8db isn't that far off from what's seen in a lot of pro studios. A lot of them target -4 to -6db as the mix output level to leave ample room for mastering after the mixing process is done. I know in my recordings I tend to keep the bass pretty near that range to leave space for the vocals and spikes from the drums without having to worry about clipping if I need to tidy some things up with plug-ins in the recording software. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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