So Richard, am I right or wrong? Does post-mic attenuation solve the problem?
Chris Church's 9100 pre-amp has a switchable 4.7k resistor in the preamp, which is certainly past the mic stage. Or is the key the amount of power being fed to the mics as plug-in-power?
Just trying to understand, which with knowing nothing about electronics puts me at a disadvantage.
Scott
It is not easy to understand this stuff without electronics.
You cannot solve the problem by putting a mic pad on the preamp.
You *may* be able to use a 4.7k resistor in Chris's preamp, but to do that, you would have to run three wires per mic. The mic input would be either two miniXLR or two miniplugs, not just a single miniplug.
I recommend everyone do the 4.7k mod. This loses a bit of gain, but you can make that up by either: A (standard) preamp, or a decent mic input stage (minidisc or Sony PCMD50).
So, what I suggest you do is send your mics to Chris and have him insert 4.7k resistors into the miniplug for you.
Richard