Microphone boost on windows

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audacityfanboy
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Microphone boost on windows

Post by audacityfanboy » Sun Jun 05, 2016 7:41 pm

Hello :)

I have a question that has been bugging me for a while. I am using windows 8.1 and if i go under recording devices i have an option called microphone boost and it goes from 0dB to about 35dB. Now for the sake of an argument lets asume i am using microphone to record human speech and listen to it later, meaning i am not using a microphone to chat in real time (for instance Skype).

Now which one of the two would be true about this boost option. Will it:

a) be the same if i put microphone boost to 0dB and later use audacity to apply gain to make it sound louder (meaning is this boost basicly gain applied after the recording is already made and is only usable in real time chat where u dont have the time to apply boost after the recording is made )

or

b) does boost actualy make microphone record the sound better, for instance if there was a very silent noice, would it be possible that with 0dB boost the microphone would not record the sound (and no amount of audacity gain afterwards would help, u simply couldnt hear that sound), while on 35dB it would actualy record the sound ?

I hope you understand what i am asking. Thank you for your answer :)

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Re: Microphone boost on windows

Post by kozikowski » Sun Jun 05, 2016 8:10 pm

Microphone Boost is there because horrified manufacturers discovered nobody's microphones would work right.

Everybody Knows you have to design quiet and slightly lower volume systems because you can usually make that up in post production. Having sound too loud causes data damage and is immediately fatal. So given those choices...

The problem comes when everybody does that "just to be safe." That gives you the recording you can barely hear with all the adjustments cranked all the way up. I have a stand-alone USB microphone preamplifier that has never done anything useful because it's just flat not loud enough.

This is where bottom-feeding kills you. There's no way to tell ahead of time how they got the boost. If the natural design cuts down the volume by 20dB and the boost is really removing the cut, then the signal will be cleaner with less noise. What's more normal is they throw an additional layer of boost and add that noise and distortion to what's there.

Changing the gain of a microphone preamp is rough to do. Microphone signals have the power and energy of butterfly wings. The good amplifiers do a boost first with custom components and then turn the show over to downstream processing where they put the volume controls.

In general, unless they publish it, you will never know.

Koz

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Re: Microphone boost on windows

Post by kozikowski » Sun Jun 05, 2016 8:49 pm

To give you an idea how microphone preamps work. I have a little Benringer UM2 stand-alone USB mic preamplifier. It says right on the tin it uses the same boost technology (XENYX Preamps) as on their larger mixers. The newer unit UMC22 uses the newer MIDAS preamps.

So it's not a throw-away second thought like it is on soundcards. It's the specific reason you cross the street with your checkbook and buy one over the other.

~~

There are tests you can do. Connect a microphone and make a recording at different settings. If everything increases volume with the boost, that is, the hiss, background sound and your voice all increase about the same amount, that's probably the best you can hope for.

If the background noise increases faster than your voice and your voice quality or timbre starts to wander, then the boost was a stick-on, bad design they put in there to make it appear they were doing something useful.

It's possible your voice will get louder without the background noise increasing. Nobody's expecting that.

Koz

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Re: Microphone boost on windows

Post by kozikowski » Sun Jun 05, 2016 11:05 pm

There is another evil possibility. Depending on your machine, you may only have one connection that they try to make do everything. Having a 0-35 slider is suspiciously close to switching between microphone input and 40dB attenuation so you can connect a hot, powerful stereo line device without causing serious overload.

Scene shifts to my little UM2. It has three separate input connections. Microphone, Instrument (guitar pickup) and Line. They do not subscribe to the fiction that you can make one connection slide gracefully between the three services.

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Re: Microphone boost on windows

Post by Gale Andrews » Mon Jun 06, 2016 2:44 pm

Audacity can apply more gain than +35 dB, but your aim is to record so that the recording meters get up to about -6 dB for the loudest part of the recording. This gives you the best signal to noise ratio and a bit of leeway to apply any effects that may boost volume (boosting bass will boost volume).

Yes, generally speaking this should be less noisy than recording at too low a level then amplifying or normalizing in Audacity to compensate.


Gale
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audacityfanboy
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Re: Microphone boost on windows

Post by audacityfanboy » Mon Jun 06, 2016 10:22 pm

I will leave the boost at +0dB for now and do a gain and noise removal later.

I have another question. I tried 3 different computers (2 laptops and 1 desktop) with this microphone. On both laptops i am getting ground buzz as soon as i connect it to power suply (1 power suply has 2 pin cable - no ground, and the other one has 3 pin meaning it should remove this issue. ). But what boggles my mind is that i also get the same buzz on desktop computer, which is connected with 3 pin AC. I checked my power sockets and they do indeed have the side pins for ground. My question is as follows:

a) would using an usb preamp for mic similar to what kozikowski is using help solve this issue ?

b) would that in itself improve noise to usable sound ratio, or would i need to get a better mic for that ?

ps: i remember using noise removal years back and i had little to none success with it. I tried it again yesterday following a simple audacity guide i found online and the result was great, i just couldnt belive how great it worked. The noise on the recording was so high that certain words weren't audible and after i did a noise removal i could actualy hear the voice alright.

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Re: Microphone boost on windows

Post by kozikowski » Mon Jun 06, 2016 10:54 pm

i remember using noise removal years back
Forget those years. Noise Removal doesn't exist any more. Audacity now has Noise Reduction. It's still not intended to make a studio performance out of your banana peels and fish wrap, but it's much better at current popular jobs such as reduce noise to get your voice performance quiet enough for AudioBook work without ACX being able to catch what you did.

I don't know we ever found out what the microphone was. What is it? There is a very sharp divide between "computer" microphones and almost anything else (XLR type, sound support, rock band, broadcast, recording).

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All these scenarios would be perfectly comfortable unplugging from one room, walking over and plugging into one of the others. Once you get into "pro" microphones, the standards tend to match and it's all up to you to figure out how many you want use, how good they need to be, etc.

None of them will be plugging into a computer any time soon, and you won't be plugging into one of their mixers or studio sound desks.

I need to read back through that again. One of the restrictions with computer microphones is they tend to have the shield/ground on the outside of the microphone. This can make hum problems come and go with how much you sweat.

Did you go through the room mains test?
Screen Shot 2016-06-06 at 3.51.25 PM.png
Screen Shot 2016-06-06 at 3.51.25 PM.png (200.78 KiB) Viewed 2771 times
In all three houses I've lived in, at least one power outlet was wired incorrectly. Not kill you incorrectly, but the other one. The one where the protective shield and ground is actually connected to the neutral power pole across the street. Not recommended.

audacityfanboy
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Re: Microphone boost on windows

Post by audacityfanboy » Fri Jun 17, 2016 5:12 pm

Thank you for all your replies !

Right now on 1 laptop i have +12dB boost and when no noise is made it will give me about -30dB in audacity. Does that feel ok or would you lower/raise boost ? I know it is best to test it and hear but just as a rule of thumb would you lower or raise.

As for testing grounds ... i am dealing with a few dollar computer microphones here, i dont have that kind of fancy equipment to measure things, all i have is multimeter. I was wondering something. In case my wiring is really screwed, would connecting ground pin on laptop power suply to a grounded object, like heating radiator or kitchen sink do any difference ?

But this is really strange because i DO remember having the same mic plugged into my main computer and at first there was this buzz but then i think i moved the mic cord away from AC power and it was fine. Now no matter what i do it doesnt help. And my computer is different now, before i had sound blaster audigy 2 value for speakers and for mic, now i use usb DAC for speakers and use integrated soundcard for mic. Again, i am using same AC sockets in the wall as i did before and it worked fine before, while now, if i plug it in ... bzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz.

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Re: Microphone boost on windows

Post by kozikowski » Fri Jun 17, 2016 8:03 pm

Oh, that's just the invitation to war stories, isn't it?

I have a musical bass cabinet that radiates a low level hum both sound and electricaleven when it's off. It took months to find it.

It's not shown in this illustration (for graphic simplicity), the sound mixer on the right plugs into the wall.

Image

It has a"fat blob" power supply and I always assumed it fed clean, regulated battery voltage up the cable to run the mixer. It doesn't. It feeds reduced voltage AC and it will hum if I get the microphone or the microphone cable too close.

Both of those are happening with good quality, recording configuration microphones and cables. "Computer microphones" are generally worse. The cables are poorer quality and they can't be very long without picking up buzz and hum. The length restriction also means you can't ever get away from a noisy computer.

You should probably know that grease and dirt are inconveniences with higher-end microphones systems, but they just kill computer microphones. The slightest finger grease on the microphone plug and there is no protective shield any more. Zero. Hum city. Did you touch the metal parts of the plug when you were installing the microphone? You probably shouldn't do that.

I suspect the first thing I would do is clean everything with alcohol-based glass cleaner or unflavored vodka. Scrub the plug with fresh paper towels and plug and replug into the computer multiple times to insure a good connection. If you listen to the system while you do that (quietly), you may find the hum coming and going and sound crackling as you clean.

Koz

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Re: Microphone boost on windows

Post by audacityfanboy » Fri Jun 17, 2016 9:57 pm

I did the cleaning thing, no luck. But things just got more interesting, 1 of the microphones is not buzzing anymore !

I got 2 microphones, 1 of them is connected with 5m long extension cord (3.5mm - 3.5mm) going into the other room (with no noicy computers and such things), the other one i am simply using for testing. And those microphones are pretty much the same, same 3.5mm jack, both got 2 wires into the mic itself, etc.

Now, the mic connected to 5m extension is the one buzzing when connected to main computer. It seems to be super sensitive to other electrical devices, but mostly if i put it near the laptop power suply it will start buzzing even when wire is a finger length away. What is funny is that with other microphone, i can touch the wire with microphone and it will make no difference. To sum it up, the microphone with extension has tiny hum even if laptop is on battery and is super sensitive to wires around it. Microphone without extension has no hum when laptop is on battery even if i put it right next to other devices.

One last thing. Microphone with extension ... if i touch any part of laptop while recording, even plastic parts - it will start humming and buzzing. Microphone without extension i can touch any part of laptop and it will not hum or buzz even the slightest.

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