Bare Knuckle Pickups Forum
Forum Ringside => Guitars, Amps and Effects => Topic started by: ibanez4life SZ on August 04, 2006, 04:43:41 PM
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Hey guys!
Most direct boxes are pretty cheap.....so, I thought that I would go out and give one a try with my recording setup!
What would you recommend? Certain brand or model?
Most importantly, could I run both my direct signal (from the slave out), and recorded signal, with my SM57, into my interface, two record the two slightly different tracks at once?
Anyone have any experience with a Recto and a Direct Box?
Thanks for all the help!
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I'm assuming by Direct Box you don't mean a DI?
Got any examples of what you've been looking at?
Muttley
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Something of this sort:
http://www.musiciansfriend.com/product/Radial-ProDI-Passive-Direct-Box?sku=153915
Yes, technically, it is a DI.
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Something of this sort:
http://www.musiciansfriend.com/product/Radial-ProDI-Passive-Direct-Box?sku=153915
Yes, technically, it is a DI.
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Not sure what amp you're talking about, but Slave OUt to me implies Speaker Out (I could be wrong). If so, speaker outs on an amp are way too hot to send to a DI box and then a PC. You'd most likely blow something.
DI boxes are designed for instrument level signals. So you'd record your raw guitar signal at the same time as recording the mic'd amplifier (to different tracks). Then you could reamp the guitar signal later. Either out of the PC and through a different amplifier or settings, or with software amp emulation such as Guitar Rig (or even a Pod).
Muttley
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I'm using a Palmer PDI-09 "Junction" with great results. It's not as good as a real loudspeaker, but I don't think anything is - on The Gear Page there's even a thread criticising the mega-expensive Sequis Motherload.
As long as you don't expect perfection, the Palmer should do the trick nicely.
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DI boxes are designed for instrument level signals.
No, not always. The TAD F.A.N.T.A., for instance, is designed to be put between the amp and the speakers. There's one built into my combo amp - plug 'n' record. ;) Behringer's Ultra-G can also handle speaker level.