Become a Site Supporter and Never see Ads again!

Author Topic: Why the heck do we use preamps anyway?  (Read 11540 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

hexyjones

  • Guest
  • Trade Count: (0)
Why the heck do we use preamps anyway?
« on: December 19, 2004, 10:08:08 AM »
What kind of A/D device could/would accurately record just the mics voltage output - so later you could just replicate what ever analog setup - feed it the recorded mic signal...that way...you could use any preamp!

I'm guessing that the mic output voltage is so small that a regular A/D would not be used to potential - nor would it have sufficient resolution for such a low level signal...

My question is - would a much higher resolution A/D stage make recording with this approch feasible...?? Is that the issue...?

You would remove all electronics between the mic and the A/D...

It seems that the current approach to recording is based on -playback- ...ie recoring a signal as such that it can be played back later...

The approach I'm suggesting is record the signal so that it can be recreated and manipulated (in either an analog or digital environment   ) into a playback level signal...

It would seem like some sort of proprietary mega-super-resolution A/D | D/A device could do it...is there such a thing...? ( im sort of betting the answer is - "of course you idiot!")

Or not?

« Last Edit: December 19, 2004, 10:10:39 AM by corkscrew »

Offline utahtaper

  • Trade Count: (1)
  • Taperssection Member
  • ***
  • Posts: 482
Re: Why the heck do we use preamps anyway?
« Reply #1 on: December 20, 2004, 10:38:33 PM »
Ok, I'll bite, I got a few minutes.
What kind of A/D device could/would accurately record just the mics voltage output - so later you could just replicate what ever analog setup - feed it the recorded mic signal...that way...you could use any preamp!

I'm guessing that the mic output voltage is so small that a regular A/D would not be used to potential - nor would it have sufficient resolution for such a low level signal...

My question is - would a much higher resolution A/D stage make recording with this approch feasible...?? Is that the issue...?

You would remove all electronics between the mic and the A/D...

It seems that the current approach to recording is based on -playback- ...ie recoring a signal as such that it can be played back later...

The approach I'm suggesting is record the signal so that it can be recreated and manipulated (in either an analog or digital environment   ) into a playback level signal...

It would seem like some sort of proprietary mega-super-resolution A/D | D/A device could do it...is there such a thing...? ( im sort of betting the answer is - "of course you idiot!")

Or not?


You can use Hi to Low Z transformers to eliminate a pre if you like.
You can manipulate recordings in either analog or digital.
Are you just thinking out loud or is there a reason to all of this?
Does this have anything to do with your UA5 thread and your distain for the Oade mods?   8)
Recording:
SKM 140's>LC3>ACM660

Playback:
Tascam DA30MKII DAT player
Jolida Tube CD player

Sota Saphire w/grado TLZ> Melos 333> Melos 400 monoblocks> Legacy Focus

Mcintosh MR71>c22>MC60 monoblocks

Offline Tim

  • Trade Count: (1)
  • Needs to get out more...
  • *****
  • Posts: 32913
  • Gender: Male
Re: Why the heck do we use preamps anyway?
« Reply #2 on: December 20, 2004, 10:43:21 PM »
there's no rule that says you must run a preamp. Doug Oade, your favorite taper, has repeatedley said "there is no preamps like NO preamp". If that's the sound you're going for do what you like. Like UT said, some line transformers should give you enough gain.

I’ve had a few weird experiences and a few close brushes with total weirdness of one sort or another, but nothing that’s really freaked me out or made me feel too awful about it. - Jerry Garcia

Offline sickrick43

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Taperssection All-Star
  • ****
  • Posts: 1787
  • Gender: Male
  • I'm NOT a fucking llama!
Re: Why the heck do we use preamps anyway?
« Reply #3 on: December 22, 2004, 01:23:56 AM »


Considering (click click pop) the guy (pop pop) is still (click pop) using a (pop pop pop) midiman CO2 (click POP) in his (pop pop click pop) signal chain (click CLICK) is this line (pop POP POP) of questioning (click CLICK) really RELEVANT?

R(click)ic(POP)k

I run a pre-amp a/d (V3) to provide phantom, clean gain, and digital conversion (and optical) in one small package, in a convenient, pleasing to my ears, quality way.  Why others do is up to them.  Putting the signal up closer to 0 utilizes more bits, gives more dynamic range (the difference between the quiet vs loud parts) and allows (with a high quality pre-A/D stage) the signal to be recorded at a level that requires less amplification on the playback end, thus allowing reasonable listening volumes on less than optimum playback systems with less added noise from amplification on a less than optimum playback system (or something like that).

4 Track & CD Live Rig: TLM-170's->V3->SD-744T  CDLive->TC Finalzer Express->Tascam CDR-900SL

24 Track Rig: Audix D6/D2/D4/I5/SCX1-C/O->Whilrwind SPC82 ISO Splitters->DigimaxLT's->Alesis HD24 (Lucid GenX192 Master Clock)

Canon 1Ds MarkII - 16-35/2.8L - 24-70/2.8L - 70-200/2.8L IS - 180/f:3.5 Macro - 550EX Flash


"this isnt a dramatic bitchy exit, its just time to go." - Big Ray (queen of the dramatic bitchy exit)

hexyjones

  • Guest
  • Trade Count: (0)
Re: Why the heck do we use preamps anyway?
« Reply #4 on: December 22, 2004, 01:44:28 AM »


Considering (click click pop) the guy (pop pop) is still (click pop) using a (pop pop pop) midiman CO2 (click POP) in his (pop pop click pop) signal chain (click CLICK) is this line (pop POP POP) of questioning (click CLICK) really RELEVANT?

R(click)ic(POP)k


Hey pal - I've never heard one click/blip out of my CO2 and I wont stop using until someone can convince me that it sucks.

Still waiting here...

http://www.taperssection.com/yabbse/index.php?topic=28597.0


I run a pre-amp a/d (V3) to provide phantom, clean gain, and digital conversion (and optical) in one small package, in a convenient, pleasing to my ears, quality way.  Why others do is up to them.  Putting the signal up closer to 0 utilizes more bits, gives more dynamic range...

The issue is a preamp...not phantom, not digital conversion...those are irrelevant to the question I asked...



...and allows (with a high quality pre-A/D stage) the signal to be recorded at a level that requires less amplification on the playback end, thus allowing reasonable listening volumes on less than optimum playback systems with less added noise from amplification on a less than optimum playback system (or something like that).


Right - see you do agree with me. The whole idea is you can play it back. - Forget about that for a second...We want to capture the mic signal/voltage without any intervention  - and so accurately that we can use that signal to run into ANY preamp to achieve the sound we are looking for...make sense...?

Offline Brian Skalinder

  • Complaint Dept.
  • Trade Count: (28)
  • Needs to get out more...
  • *****
  • Posts: 18868
  • Gender: Male
Re: Why the heck do we use preamps anyway?
« Reply #5 on: December 22, 2004, 09:51:03 AM »
My question is - would a much higher resolution A/D stage make recording with this approch feasible...?? Is that the issue...?

I think the issue is not the resolution of the ADC, but rather the signal-to-noise ratio.  Let's assume you have an uber-high-res ADC (say, 256-bit, 468kHz).  While capturing greater detail in the music, it would simply capture greater detail in the accompanying noise as well.

If you can get strong enough levels into the ADC without a preamp - to ensure utilizing maximum resolution of the ADC - then there's no reason to run a preamp.  I used to run mics > phantom power > line transformers > ADC.  The line transformers acted as my gain stage instead of a full-on preamp.  Not really what you're talking about, but...FWIW.  I've also heard of others running AKG 481s directly into a modSBM-1 because the mics provide a hot enough signal at loud rock shows to feed the modSBM-1s line-in stage directly, without a preamp.
Milab VM-44 Links > Fostex FR-2LE or
Naiant IPA (tinybox format) >
Roland R-05

Offline johnw

  • Trade Count: (11)
  • Needs to get out more...
  • *****
  • Posts: 3818
  • Gender: Male
    • My cd List
Re: Why the heck do we use preamps anyway?
« Reply #6 on: December 22, 2004, 09:58:13 AM »

Putting the signal up closer to 0 utilizes more bits, gives more dynamic range

To me this would be the #1 reason to use a preamp. I've been told that even after putting the signal closer to 0, I am still using only ~ 14.5 out of 16 bits in a 44.1/16 recording.

If you are really not wanting to use a preamp, maybe you should look into the Neumann Solution DS digital microphone pair - with the AD built in, there is no use for a pre or external AD. Field recording might be a problem with these though.
Schoeps MK41 & MK4V  |  Schoeps CMC6, Schoeps KCY, AKI/2C, PFA, Nbox Cable/PFA  |  Grace V2, Nbox Platinum  |  SD744T, SD MixPre 6, Sony PCM M10

Canon 16-35mm/2.8L mkii, 24-70mm/2.8L, 70-200mm/2.8L IS, 50mm/1.8 mkii, 135mm/2L, 100mm/2.8L IS, Sigma 35mm/1.4 A  |  Canon 5D mk4

Offline jk labs

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Taperssection Regular
  • **
  • Posts: 191
  • Gender: Male
  • Straight wire!
    • Mics, pre and ADC...
Re: Why the heck do we use preamps anyway?
« Reply #7 on: December 22, 2004, 10:19:28 AM »
My question is - would a much higher resolution A/D stage make recording with this approch feasible...?? Is that the issue...?

I think the issue is not the resolution of the ADC, but rather the signal-to-noise ratio.  Let's assume you have an uber-high-res ADC (say, 256-bit, 468kHz).  While capturing greater detail in the music, it would simply capture greater detail in the accompanying noise as well.

And even that is too optimistic! The ADC itself has a fixed noisefloor below which there are no details to capture: the "bit-determining" part of the ADC _itself_ yields random noise.  With a mic signal input say 20 dB above this noisefloor would result in a dynamic range of just that, 20 dB (+ some due to oversamplng etc). 

With mics putting out -40 dB at 94 dB SPL I do agree though that a separate mic-pre might not be needed if the line stage provides sufficient gain. The line stage within the sbm-1 provides 26 dB gain (20 + differential drive) ahead of the ADC chip.

Introducing a mic-pre here would be an issue of needing more gain and possibly also optimizing the signal path wrt to impedance/loading, preventing unfavorable settings of level controls etc.

Also, the ADC along with it's digital support circuitry, might not be the best neighborhood for doing amplification of analog signals.

so there are pros and cons ;D
« Last Edit: December 22, 2004, 10:34:43 AM by jk labs »

hexyjones

  • Guest
  • Trade Count: (0)
Re: Why the heck do we use preamps anyway?
« Reply #8 on: December 22, 2004, 12:21:41 PM »
My question is - would a much higher resolution A/D stage make recording with this approch feasible...?? Is that the issue...?

I think the issue is not the resolution of the ADC, but rather the signal-to-noise ratio.  Let's assume you have an uber-high-res ADC (say, 256-bit, 468kHz).  While capturing greater detail in the music, it would simply capture greater detail in the accompanying noise as well.

If you can get strong enough levels into the ADC without a preamp - to ensure utilizing maximum resolution of the ADC - then there's no reason to run a preamp.  I used to run mics > phantom power > line transformers > ADC.  The line transformers acted as my gain stage instead of a full-on preamp.  Not really what you're talking about, but...FWIW.  I've also heard of others running AKG 481s directly into a modSBM-1 because the mics provide a hot enough signal at loud rock shows to feed the modSBM-1s line-in stage directly, without a preamp.

Wouldnt any noise inherent in the mic be amplified by the preamp? (assuming that's the "accompanying noise" you refer to) Wouldn't the inherent noise be a fixed ratio - no matter how much gain is added...

Also, wouldn't the uber A/D have a rediculously low niose floor?


hexyjones

  • Guest
  • Trade Count: (0)
Re: Why the heck do we use preamps anyway?
« Reply #9 on: December 22, 2004, 12:28:27 PM »

Putting the signal up closer to 0 utilizes more bits, gives more dynamic range

To me this would be the #1 reason to use a preamp. I've been told that even after putting the signal closer to 0, I am still using only ~ 14.5 out of 16 bits in a 44.1/16 recording.

If you are really not wanting to use a preamp, maybe you should look into the Neumann Solution DS digital microphone pair - with the AD built in, there is no use for a pre or external AD. Field recording might be a problem with these though.

Im not really trying to debate the usefulness of a preamp...just wondering if there was a way to capture the signal right out of the mic and then use it as we please...

To clarify - I think I'm talking about a hypothetical AD and DA combo...

You would come home from a show...set up your UberA/D recorder...hit "play" and then you could run that signal into any mic preamp of your choice....you could produce both an SBM-1 version and a UA5 version from the same mic source...

The signal from the Uber AD>DA would be - in theory - exactly the same as if you were at the show with your mics...

make sense...?

jpschust

  • Guest
  • Trade Count: (0)
Re: Why the heck do we use preamps anyway?
« Reply #10 on: December 22, 2004, 12:38:11 PM »
well you are still involving a mic preamp at some stage of the game if you are bringing it to line level then a/d and then d/a.  whether the gain comes internally from the mic, from an external source, or this uber ADDA you mention.

You would theoretically be introducing more noise into your signal by the way you mention it.  It seems you almost want a reamping technique for mics, but it doesnt quite work that way.

In theory your progression would go Mics > some sort of gain (which would technically be a pre) to bring it to line level for an A/D > D/A> a mic preamp > A/D to record. 


hexyjones

  • Guest
  • Trade Count: (0)
Re: Why the heck do we use preamps anyway?
« Reply #11 on: December 22, 2004, 12:42:17 PM »
well you are still involving a mic preamp at some stage of the game if you are bringing it to line level then a/d and then d/a.  whether the gain comes internally from the mic, from an external source, or this uber ADDA you mention.

You would theoretically be introducing more noise into your signal by the way you mention it.  It seems you almost want a reamping technique for mics, but it doesnt quite work that way.

In theory your progression would go Mics > some sort of gain (which would technically be a pre) to bring it to line level for an A/D > D/A> a mic preamp > A/D to record. 



Nope - it would look like this...(again - I'm trying to avoid bringing the mic output to line level...the only reason that is done is for playback)

For recording:

Mics > Cables > Uber A/D equiped recorder

For post production:

Uber D/A playback > Preamp of your choice > A/D to 44.1 > CD
« Last Edit: December 22, 2004, 12:45:40 PM by corkscrew »

Offline Brian Skalinder

  • Complaint Dept.
  • Trade Count: (28)
  • Needs to get out more...
  • *****
  • Posts: 18868
  • Gender: Male
Re: Why the heck do we use preamps anyway?
« Reply #12 on: December 22, 2004, 01:05:15 PM »
Nope - it would look like this...(again - I'm trying to avoid bringing the mic output to line level...the only reason that is done is for playback)

For recording:

Mics > Cables > Uber A/D equiped recorder

For post production:

Uber D/A playback > Preamp of your choice > A/D to 44.1 > CD

Regardless, you're still amplifying the signal - it just happens that in your example it's happening in a different location/time.  And what's the point of performing A>D, then D>A, then A>D again?  Doesn't make much sense.

It must be fun to live in a fantasyland, Uber-corkScrew(ball).  :P
Milab VM-44 Links > Fostex FR-2LE or
Naiant IPA (tinybox format) >
Roland R-05

hexyjones

  • Guest
  • Trade Count: (0)
Re: Why the heck do we use preamps anyway?
« Reply #13 on: December 22, 2004, 01:27:48 PM »
Nope - it would look like this...(again - I'm trying to avoid bringing the mic output to line level...the only reason that is done is for playback)

For recording:

Mics > Cables > Uber A/D equiped recorder

For post production:

Uber D/A playback > Preamp of your choice > A/D to 44.1 > CD

Regardless, you're still amplifying the signal - it just happens that in your example it's happening in a different location/time.  And what's the point of performing A>D, then D>A, then A>D again?  Doesn't make much sense.

It must be fun to live in a fantasyland, Uber-corkScrew(ball).  :P

Well - of course - we could have UA5 plug-ins and SBM-1 plug-ins so we would not have to perform the addtional D/A > preamp > A/D step...!!!

I'm just trying suggest a way we could capture the signal from our mics, and just do the preamp part later in post-production....be it analog or digital...

And dont just brush off the "different location and time..." part...that's BIG...

Say, 2 years from now, you luck into some sort of sweet high-end preamp...you think "Boy I wish I had had this thing at the 04 SCI NYE show!" - - Well...with my system - you can...just go back to your "mic master" and send the signal through your new pre...

Offline Brian Skalinder

  • Complaint Dept.
  • Trade Count: (28)
  • Needs to get out more...
  • *****
  • Posts: 18868
  • Gender: Male
Re: Why the heck do we use preamps anyway?
« Reply #14 on: December 22, 2004, 01:32:00 PM »
I'm just trying suggest a way we could capture the signal from our mics, and just do the preamp part later in post-production....be it analog or digital...

And dont just brush off the "different location and time..." part...that's BIG...

Yes, it is BIG.  Hence the reason to do it up front to maximize signal:noise.

Wouldnt any noise inherent in the mic be amplified by the preamp?

Yes.  But of greater importance is the inherent noise floor of the preamp and ADC.

I have neither the patience nor desire to educate you on the matter of device noise floor, signal-to-noise ratio, etc.  Spend some time on Google and you'll learn all you need to apply to your uber-gear fantasies.  Or if you're really lucky, JK Labs will chime in again.
Milab VM-44 Links > Fostex FR-2LE or
Naiant IPA (tinybox format) >
Roland R-05

 

RSS | Mobile
Page created in 0.112 seconds with 39 queries.
© 2002-2024 Taperssection.com
Powered by SMF