
When researching this product, I wasn’t able to find info on its sampling rate capabilities in the USB interface. Just got mine today and was testing it out in a variety of situations, and found a bit more technical info:USB audio interface is based on the Texas Instruments PCM2902, capable of 8kHz, 11.025kHz, 16kHz, 22.05kHz, 32kHz, 44.1kHz, and 48kHz sampling rates on input.It worked great for recording a variety of instruments in my tests. Nice and quiet. The limiter can be a bit noticeable if you push it too hard at least on acoustic guitar. Plugging in an electric and pushing the gain up a bit gives a tube distortion that is usable. Just don’t run the gain too high or you’ll hear a nasty surprise. Tried out a Rode NT1-A and an MXL 990, both phantom powered condenser mics. Results were clean and smooth, with a nice round, natural tone.Then I used it as a DI box for live sound. The gain structure of this thing is crazy. Where my guitar with a Martin Gold Plus thinline
I need to choose a motor/gearbox and control system for a project im working on to mix polymer powders. The torque range i need is 0 to about 200Nm and i recon Mixer Project a max of about 1500rpm? Im using a small twin screw co-rotating screw system with a capacity of around 2.5liters. Any tips would be greatly appreciated.the torque range is questionable. 100Nm would probably be fine! I have been asked to control, torque, speed of the screws rotation, and the mixing time. The speed and time im guessing would be simple enough with a timer switch and some kind of tachometer controler?
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Tags: Acoustic Guitar, Audio Interface, Capabilities, Condenser, Condenser Mics, Free Mixer, Gain Structure, Keyword, Martin Gold, Mxl 990, Nasty Surprise, Natural Tone, Project 1, Sampling Rate, Sampling Rates, Texas Instruments, Thinline, Tube Distortion, Usb Interface






















September 27th, 2010 at 7:53 am
This product is about 95% solid state and well designed and made, but the 5% tube part is the heart of the sound. If you want THE SOUND, tubes are REAL and Amp modeling is PRETENDING to be real. It has plenty of control and also functions as a DI box. An awesome sound and value. Try it, you won’t be disappointed.
September 27th, 2010 at 7:48 pm
Avoid this preamp. I’ve tried different configurations with it, and each time it just acts as a noise injector. I get a significantly quieter signal if I hook my mic directly to the mixer channel input and turn the mixer preamp control up near max.
Changing input and output connections, phase settings, input/output settings, etc, does not remove the noise.
Spend the money on a high-end tube preamp if you need one.