Hey all, so I have 2 cdj’s and a mixer which is hooked up to KRK 8’s and the 10s sub, the mixer is a DJM 200 and I have the master 2 going to an external USB sound card, here is the thing, it seems like my master level is extremely low, I have to crank up the volume so much that I would have to blow up my room to get a proper signal to send to my laptop for recording. The signals coming from the CDJ’s are fine, but the master on my mixer is just barely flashing 2 green led’s on the meter (whatever it’s called…) Right now I have the line in dialed up all the way on the sound card and the signal is just barely coming in, and there is an annoying white noise underneath it. Does anyone know what could be the problem here? I’m using an audio track in ableton to record.
This is where an AUX or Booth Out would really help you. When I record from my DJM-909, I have the master low as well (BX8 D2 Monitors) but adjust the Session Out to the proper level for recording (usually about 75%-80% up).
it sounds like the problem is at the mixer. You said the master only gets up to few bars of green? Turn the gains up on the CDJs. How does the mixer sound through the headphones?
Booth out ftw. It can be tricky recording sometimes, when i record others using cdjs etc, i use audition through my audio 6, you need to find a good balance of volume and recording level. in your case as mentioned above, best bet is to get your main level up to 3/4 and go from there. Easy enough if you use traktor, other apps are a different story
Oh sorry it’s the 400, and the CDJ’s are coming in fine, gained in so they are just hitting yellow, the problem is at the master, which I can turn up all I want but the meter is hardly showing signal.
PS:
Sorry to sound stupid but booth out? My mixer has 2 master outputs (the red/white cable forgot the english name for them), this what you mean by booth out?
It is possible that the “Master 2” output is lower output than “Master 1”. Try swapping the speakers & recording cables on the Master 1 & 2 outputs. This test will show if there is a substantial difference in the output levels between Master 1 & Master 2.
Also, on a typical computer, there are SEVERAL places to set the input gain for recording. Be sure that you have checked them all. In particular, check the OS level input and the Recording Software level input. There may also be a physical control on the soundcard…you don’t mention the model so I can’t look it up.
Pioneer mixers are designed to run with peaks in the orange (for both Channels and the Master). If you’re only getting a few bars of green, your outputs will of course be very low.