![]() ![]() Yeah, exactly as you said - the white cable gave me a satisfying hum, the red, nothing. If you only get buzz on the white cable (left), then there’s something on the Behringer or computer side. But audacity mono recording only seems to get left channel. But how to record mono guitar track The guitar has to be plugged into the tascam Right input (as it’s the high impedance guitar input). If you get hum and buzz on both cables, then the mixer is doing something wrong. It has two inputs, mic in Left and guitar in Right I can record a mono vocal track via my mic fine. Start Audacity recording and touch one RCA and then the other. Unplug the Behringer from the mixer so that you’re holding the Behringer cables in your hand. I don’t remember what it’s called but turning all the effects off solved the problem.Īs far as the single channel recording goes you can examine the two systems independently of each other with the touch test. I struggled with a Win7 machine for hours to get rid of a “theater echo” effect to my conferencing sound and it turned out to be an sound effects package inside the Windows Control Panels. Good afternoon, I recently recorded an episode of a a podcast and for some reason my audio only recorded in the left channel, (or left ear). You didn’t say you were on Windows, but that’s a terrifically good bet. Audacity recording only playing in one ear. Sound with reverb (part of the desk i believe) So, after much desperate experimentation with basically all of my computers sound settings, and achieving nothing, is there anything that can be done? These all come through as if they were a mono track on audacity. When any of the channels is panned left, I get a reasonably loud sound, centrally an even sound with reverb (part of the desk i believe) and when panned right a VERY quiet signal. However, when I came to recording, all I can pick up (in every channel on the mixer, believe me I’ve tried!) is the left side of the channel, and audacity simply shows this in mono, even when recording into 2 (stereo) Input. ![]() I also thought I could easily sort out any balance issues by panning each track left and right on the mixer and then recording to get 2 split-able tracks. However, I recently acquired my D112, and obviously wanted to record this simultaneously with my SM57 for my drums to get a balance between Kit and Bass Drum. This is then going (through the Red/White CD/Tape output) into a Behringher UCA222 (See link 2) adapter to USB connector, and then running this into my computer and Audacity 2.xĪll well and good so far, and up until now I had been doing single track recordings which had worked out reasonably well for my band on a basic level. Right, so I am using an SM57 and AKG D112 into a Behringher Xenyx 1202 FX Mixer. Hello! Now, here I have a problem that I thought I found a solution for, but didn’t so, I felt this would be the place to ask. ![]()
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