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Author Topic: Interconnect cabling- before or at the show?  (Read 1171 times)

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Offline Benderman11

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Interconnect cabling- before or at the show?
« on: February 02, 2022, 09:33:34 AM »
Curious how you guys prepare for recording if you have multiple devices in your bag, i.e preamp to recorder interconnects or external battery cables. Do you prefer to perform all cabling between devices and batteries once at the show or do you hook up interconnect cables prior to arrival?

Ideally I'm looking to have everything connected inside my bag with a 'XLR pigtail' to hook the microphones up once placed on stand and be ready to roll. I've always been cautious to do this however, concerned about damaging a device input with an inserted cable.

Thoughts?
mics: Joly Modded Oktava MK-012MSP, Telefunken M60 stereo set, Neumann ak40, ak43, or ak50 > Nick mod lc3 > Naiant PFA or km100
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Offline opsopcopolis

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Re: Interconnect cabling- before or at the show?
« Reply #1 on: February 02, 2022, 09:51:11 AM »
I always patch everything at the show.

Offline Gutbucket

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Re: Interconnect cabling- before or at the show?
« Reply #2 on: February 02, 2022, 10:33:33 AM »
I find it preferable to have as much hooked up beforehand as is practical.  Properly arranged, this puts less stress on me, the gear, speeds setup and breakdown, eliminates potential for error, and keeps everything neat, safely stored, and under control.  Certain connections may need protection, angle adapters, or short pig-tails - things like TRS plugs that would otherwise stick out from an input and create a lever-arm (right angle adapters can help there), or the small vulnerable DPA microdot connections extending out the end of XLR adapters (plug them into short XLR pig tails and tuck them under the recorder rather than having them rigidly protrude out from the side).

A lot of tapers setup the stuff in their recording bag that way, so that they only need attach microphone cables and mics to get rolling.

I tend to take this to a greater extreme than most, in part because I run multichannel arrays with high channel counts that would otherwise be quite a hassle and mess to setup and confirm each outing. In my big primary rig everything from microphones to recorder remains hooked up at all times.  The microphones are already attached to their support system in their windscreens, and all cables are pre-routed through a single collective sheath which runs from the mic-support system to the recording gear stored in a second compartment of the mic-storage/recording bag.  I can walk in, setup a stand or clamp, power-up and be recording in under a minute, stress free, knowing I have all 8 channels of microphones routed and wired correctly, without a bunch of wires and gear all over the place.

If recording on stage using an alternate microphone array or some situation where I need mic-setup flexibility I'll have the stuff in the bag hooked up but carry the mics and mic-cables separately, and it always amazes me how much more of a hassle that is to setup and break down.
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Offline rocksuitcase

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Re: Interconnect cabling- before or at the show?
« Reply #3 on: February 02, 2022, 12:31:09 PM »
I use your approach. I didn't used to, but once we went multi-channel kindms figured a way for us to keep everything cabled permanently, using XLR in pigtails as you described.
In fact, Ted (Gakables) was instrumental in this, by building the interconnects to our dimensions using RT angle stubbies when applicable/desirable.
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Offline fireonshakedwnstreet

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Re: Interconnect cabling- before or at the show?
« Reply #4 on: February 02, 2022, 12:53:50 PM »
Will echo my fellow OMTers, rock and gb. I have everything hooked up the night before. Eight channel snake, interconnects, pads, preamps to recorder, etc. My mic bar also has the shock mounts set up for all the full-body mics, so I only have to tape the mini-omnis to the end. I still sweat like a stuck pig getting all that stuff up before the lights go down!
Mics: AT 3031; AT 853Rx (c, o); Samson C02; Studio Projects C4 (c, o, h); Nak 300/Tascam PE-125/JVC M510 (cp-1, cp-2, cp-3, JVC M510 superdirectional caps)
Recorders: Tascam DR-680 MkII; Tascam DR-70D
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