Title: Making all the right connections
1Making all the right connections
2What is Audio Signal Flow?
- Audio Of or relating to sound or sound
reproduction Websters II New Riverside
Dictionary - Audio Signal a representation of sound waves in
a different form. Typically this is an electrical
voltageAn audio signal can be manipulated,
stored, transmitted and reproduced in ways that a
sound wave cannot. - http//en.wikipedia.org/wik
i/Audio_signal - Audio Signal Flow the term used to describe the
path an audio signal will take from source
(microphone) to the speaker or recording device.
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_signal
3Rules of Signal Flow
- Rule 1 Things always work better when they are
plugged in - Rule 2 Outputs are connected to Inputs (and
vice versa) - Basic Plumbing - the signal only flows in one
direction - Follow the electrons (hint theyre inside the
cable) - Audio signals require at least two wires one for
signal and one for ground - (Dont confuse WIRE with CABLE one CABLE can
contain several wires)
4Common Audio Connectors
- Balanced (professional equipment)
- XLR
- 1/4-inch TRS
- Unbalanced (consumer equipment)
- 1/4-inch TS
- RCA
5Balanced vs. Unbalanced
- An audio cable is an antenna - it picks up noise
along its length - The signal cannot be separated from the noise on
an unbalanced signal - A balanced signal can eliminate this noise
through destructive interference - Unbalanced cables require two conductors,
- Balanced cables require three
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7How noise affects a signal
8A bit about polarity and phase
- Sound waves alternate between high pressure and
low pressure - Electrical audio signals alternate between
positive () and negative (-) - Polarity indicates a positive or negative value
- Musical Sounds have a repetitive wave pattern - a
cycle that repeats - Phase tells us where we are in a cycle
- Phase is measured in degrees or radians
- One complete cycle 3600 of phase
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10Male vs. Female
- use your imagination
- With XLR, male tends to be an output and female
tends to be an input - An XLR cable generally has two genders
- 1/4-inch and RCA cables are generally male at
both ends
11What level is it?
- Every input expects ONE TYPE of level.
Mismatching can result either in distortion or no
usable signal - Mic level - smallest (-60 dB)
- XLR connector
- Consumer level (-10 dB)
- Home stereo equipment
- VCR/DVD/TV
- Uses RCA connectors
- Line Level - highest (4 dB)
- Professional equipment - mixers, preamplifiers,
keyboards, recording equipment, etc. - 1/4-inch or XLR connector
12Gain Staging
- Signal must be the right level for the next piece
of equipment in the chain - Too small signal lost in noise
- Too big distortion (clipping)
- Gain an increase - Websters II New Riverside
Dictionary - Any point in the signal chain where the amount of
signal can be adjusted (boosted) is called a
Gain Stage - Mic-level signals must be raised to line-level
for recording - Microphone Preamp
13Gain is NOT volume
- Don't confuse listening volume with Gain
- An increase in Gain will make something louder,
but this is NOT the way to set recording levels
14Simple Signal Flow
Preamp
Power Amp
(speaker)
(microphone)
15Channel vs. Track
- Channel a means of passing, transmitting, or
communicating. - Websters II New Riverside Dictionary
- Track a place to store audio information
- Where is the signal going?
- It gets recorded to a track
- It passes through a channel
16Multitrack Recording
- When you are recording to more than one track,
this is called multitrack recording - In the recording studio, a number of microphones
or sources can be recorded simultaneously - The signal from each mic and/or source can be
recorded to a different track so that it can be
processed separately and mixed later - You can also record one mic (or source) several
times to make it sound like it all happened at
the same time (overdub)
17Mono vs. Stereo
- Mono literally means one
- Mono is one distinct channel of audio information
- Stereo comes from the Greek stereos meaning
solid or something that has length, width, and
height - Stereo is an aural illusion which requires two or
more distinct channels of information one
channel for the left one for the right. - Most things are RECORDED as MONO sources and we
use them to create a STEREO mix
18Mono or stereo?
- Recording how many outputs does the device have?
- One output mono. Typically a single microphone
on a single is a MONO source - Two outputs could mean stereo. Many electronic
instruments (like keyboards or drum machines)
have stereo outputs - A pinpoint source should be recorded mono
something that takes up space left-to-right
should be stereo - For your mixes to be stereo, youll have to make
use of the pan knob to move things to the right
or left. - If everything is panned center, you might have a
MONO mix.
19TYPICAL SIGNAL FLOW IN A DIGITAL AUDIO CHAIN A
computer needs a soundcard (aka Audio Interface)
to receive or send audio signals. Often, the
computer acts as a Digital Recorder. Usually,
the soundcard will convert the signal from ANALOG
to DIGITAL for the computer. Then, it converts
the DIGITAL signal from the computer back to
ANALOG to be played back for humans A computer
soundcard can be internal or external. Many
external soundcards use Firewire or USB. All
computer soundcards have ADCs and DACs built
into them. Some soundcards even have built-in
preamps.
(microphone)
Preamp
ADC
SOUNDCARD
Computer/Recorder
DAC
Power Amp
(speaker)
(headphones)
20Summary
- Signal only flows in one direction
- Outputs are connected to inputs
- There are three basic signal levels mic (-60dB),
consumer (-10dB), and line (4dB) - Unbalanced signals 2 conductors - signal and
ground CANNOT eliminate noise picked up on the
cable - Balanced signals 3 conductors signal , signal
- , and ground CAN eliminate noise picked up on
the cable - We record most things as mono sources we use
them to create stereo mixes - Gain Staging optimizing the signal level for the
next device in the signal chain