Well, you were right Steve, the 1st try did pretty much turn out to be garbage. Well, it was just the speaker's talk that turned out to be garbage, the choir's songs to start and end the night turned out pretty well.
I was hoping to get there a little earlier, but arrived about 20 minutes before it was to start. The pastor was talking to the speaker right by the mixer board and introduced us saying that I'd be trying to record the talk. The speaker graciously consented to the recording. The lady in charge of the music & choir etc. wasn't there again tonight and neither her substitute nor the other choir members objected to me hooking my computer up, particularly since I obviously had the pastor's blessing, so things were looking good at that point.
There was an organ with a flat top right next to & behind the mixer board which was a perfect place to set the computer.
Things went downhill quickly from there, however. It had been awhile since I had hooked up the Behringer to my home stereo, but was pretty confident that I needed to hook up the RCA cable from the "input" jacks on the Behringer to the "tape out" jacks on the mixer board. I wasn't so confident, however, when things didn't work as I had expected right off the bat.
I had closed all other programs but Audacity before I left home and it popped right back to where I left off after I logged in when I got there. There were some people already coming in, but I went ahead and hit the record button to try a sound check, but the cursor wouldn't move from the start position, though it acted like it wanted to, but was being held back. I have had that problem in the past and ended up switching the options around on the drop down menus on the tool bar. It had been working fine on the stereo at home using WASAPI & USB speakers & USB mic, but I started selecting various other combinations and permutations but nothing worked. I tried Windows Direct & MME, for instance, but they would take away the USB mic option & Stereo Mix & Primary Sound Capture Drive would allow the recording to seem to start but were pulling up silence when I'd run up & do a test on the mic that would be used. The pastor went up and started doing mic tests for me so I wouldn't have to run back and forth, but still to no avail. WASAPI & USB mic continued to not even pretend to try and record for whatever reason.
I don't remember the details of which selections were selected at the time, but at some point the sound level meters were acting like they were getting signals, but nothing was showing up in the sound waves portion.
I told the pastor to just go ahead and start & I'd fiddle with it as we went. I said a little prayer right then and then they started. To my amazement, so did Audacity as the choir started singing. It was in Wasapi & USB mic and the sound waves were just about right. I was caught a little off guard, but pulled the sliders down on the mic in Audacity a bit but it was actually better where it started, probably just above -6 dB.
But when the speaker started the sound levels dropped way down, almost to the zero line on the wave form & I was almost maxed out on the mic level already. Maxing it didn't help much. I was wondering if it was just picking up from the laptop mic, or maybe the pianist's mic, which she had moved out of the way, pointing away from the speaker. I moved the slider up on the mixer board for the channel I had plugged into, but it sounded to me like I had turned up the mic the speaker was using. It sounded a bit loud to me and made a comment about people thinking he spoke too softly. The slider was only about a quarter of the way up, though, and I couldn't figure out why he would be coming through so loud & clear but my recording was so weak.
There were a couple of other wires plugged into the jacks below mine on that same channel & after I sat down I wondered if the tape in & tape out jacks were on the same channel being used by the speaker's microphone. I wouldn't have expected that to be possible, but it had me a little worried.
He was an experienced speaker, but from some recent readings I wondered whether he knew how to "work the mic". He was having issues with 'plosives and also with the proximity effect to an extent, being a bit too quiet at times and too loud for awhile at other times. That made it hard for me to tell if my slider adjustment had made his mic a little too loud. In any event, it made me too nervous to try and turn it up any & in fact I turned it down a little bit a couple of times to see if it would make his mic a little less loud. I didn't want to make any changes too obvious, though, as I may have already been distracting people.
I hadn't plugged in my laptop either as it should run for at least 3 hours, but the screen dimmed and later turned off for power saving mode. I got nervous, though, when one of the power lights went off. I was afraid if it went into hibernation or whatever Audacity would stop and I hadn't saved the file at all, because I had turned Audacity on and off several times & even rebooted the computer once because I couldn't get it to go in WASAPI & USB mic mode. I didn't want to lose everything.
I snuck up & got the charger out of my bag & hooked it up as unobtrusively as I could & luckily it was still recording, though still at the barely audible range.
At the end, when the choir sang it popped right back into the near perfect range.
Afterwards I asked one of the choir members if there were any other mixer boards than this one. I couldn't see any others around, but couldn't see why one input, that sounded just as loud as the others should be so much queiter on the tape out monitor. He said that there was an add on board on the other side of the mixer. I went over there and sure enough, there was another board attached on the side and a little lower than the main board. I about kicked myself, saying that had I known I should have plugged into the tape monitor out on that board. He said that actually, those were for some other mics just in front of us that weren't in use that night since they didn't have the full choir.
I mentioned how baffling this was to me and then he said that actually these two mixer boards and the mics up on the altar and the cordless mics all fed into a bigger unit in the back in a big closet. I said I should have been hooked into that one then, but they told me that closet was usually locked and no one could go back there. They said it was open tonight however & the guy took me back and showed me a great big metal unit. I'm guessing it was about 4 1/2 feet high, maybe 4 feet deep and about as wide as the mixer boards, maybe a little more. The front was locked in by a heavy metal cage. He opened it for me, but it looked more like some big amps atop one another in a big rack mount. I didn't get a good look at it, but I saw a few lights maybe but no input our output jacks or anything. The sides wouldn't open, but he opened the back and said there was nothing in there that looked like I could hook into it. I couldn't see it from my angle, but was guessing that it was mostly wires connecting them all together but not a standard consumer grade inputs & outputs.
I'm not sure what to make of it all, or if I could figure out how to record it tomorrow evening.
steve wrote:JeffB wrote:Is "the damage done" to the recording or to the UCA 202 &/or sound card or to the computer?
To the recording.
Good. I thought I read something yesterday that warned about damaging the sound card or even the hard drive on a computer due to clipping. That kind of shocked me as I didn't think that was even a possibility. I hope not. Maybe I read it wrong.
JeffB wrote:That's another good thing to know. I was hoping to just be able to plug in and adjust things in Audacity without having to bother any of the settings that the choir uses. Someone there is usually the one that adjusts all of the settings. I got the permission of the Pastor to do the recording. They might not take too kindly to me playing around with those things.
The UCA 202 is a great little gadget, and very inexpensive, but one limitation that it has is that there is no control of the input level - that has to be controlled by whatever is supplying the signal (in your case it's the mixing desk). If the sound man (or woman) is not you, then make friends with them asap - find out if they like chocolate - you will need to work with them. Depending on the type of mixing desk, there is likely to be some control of the output level to your UCA 202 that can be adjusted independently of the main output - you will probably need the person running the desk to adjust their "send level" so that your input levels are right.[/quote]
Well I get to run a different sound board for the school's Dance Assembly on Friday morning and will set it up tomorrow night. Hopefully I'll get a chance to play around with it a bit and try to figure things out.
JeffB wrote:Decibels are a measure of how loud a signal is, correct? Why do some measures use negative numbers?
Decibels are not "units", they are "ratios". Decibels are used to compare one level with another. When saying that a signal is so many dB, for that to make sense it must be so many dB relative to a known level. For signals the "known level" is usually "full scale" (maximum valid signal). That means that a "maximum" signal is the zero point (0dB) and all other valid signals are negative (less than zero). This is different from measuring acoustic sound level ("Sound Pressure Level" or "SPL") - in this case, the reference point (0 dB) is usually taken to be the quietest thing that can almost be heard (the threshold of hearing). Thus for SPL, any sound that can be heard is positive dB.[/quote]
That's definitely where I was getting mixed up. Years ago I must have read the SPL version and though a decible had been defined as the lowest unit of sound someone with good hearing could actually hear. If I recall they also said that for people to be able to distinguish that one sound was louder than another required a 3 decible increase, and that for each 3 decible increase a doubling of the power was required. I think it was in the context of speakers and amplifiers. Doing the math on how powerful amps would have to be to get to 110 decibles if the speakers could put out 80 decibles at 1 watt of power (just making numbers up here) was pretty eye opening.
Anyway, thanks for all of the help and info everybody. This sound stuff is a lot more complicated (& interesting) than it looks at first glance.