Man, was I happy to find this mic (and this forum!). I play bluegrass and folk, and the guitar I use most of the time has a great sound but isn't loud enough to compete with other instruments. I was getting tired of moving back and forth into mics!
So far, I've used the Pro 70 only twice. The first time, it was great. I loved it. No problems. Great sound. Throughout the show, I experimented with different placements of the mic until I found one that suited me.
The second time I used it, I had trouble. We kept getting this loud roaring low end feedback. We couldn't figure out what the problem was. I even kept accusing our bass player of causing the trouble. I kept saying "Mute your strings!" Of course, I was the problem. Something in the Pro 70 wasn't working.
I could mute my strings and turn the power pack on and we would get that low roar. I took the battery out and used straight phantom power. Same problem. I switched cords. Same problem.
The only time it wouldn't roar was when I was playing. After a song, roar. Turn on the switch, roar.
Any ideas?
Comments
Thanks!
Caravan Gypsy Swing Ensemble
www.gypsyswing.com
There are two options when switching it on. The switch has these three symbols (or something close) in this order top to bottom:
/---
___
Off
That top symbol is sort of hard to pull off when typing, but you can probably get the idea.
According to the paperwork, these are for off (obviously), on-flat, and on-roll-off. Is this the switch you mean? And it didn't really matter which position the switch was in---we got the same roar either way, as soon as I flipped the switch.
I sort of feel like a fish out of water these days. I played for many years but sold all my gear years ago when I left Nashville for grad school. Now that I've gotten back into years later, it seems like I've been asleep for 20 years!! I promise, I used to know more about this!
Thanks for your help, by the way.
So any thoughts about what the booming might have been? It seems to me that not matter which position the switch was in, we had building shaking roar. I'm just wondering if maybe the switch is bad.
James
One other thing of note is that both John Jorgenson and Kevin Nolan are using the Pro 70. They are rigging it up below the strings and behind the bridge with a home made bracket. That gets it away from the sound hole witch can be problematic. Kevin showed it to me last time they were here. They have the mic taped to a cut up hotel key card and woven through the strings behind the bridge. It is pretty funny but it works for them. I have not tried that yet.
I use the provided lapel bracket and extend it as far away as possible from the sound hole. I actually think that I took it apart and reversed the bracket to get it further away from the sound hole but still hooked on it. I will have to look at it again tonight.
It's a nice mic. Pretty hot signal!!
Caravan Gypsy Swing Ensemble
www.gypsyswing.com
Definitely interesting to hear about the Jorgenson setup. Can you describe it in a bit more detail? Which direction does the mic point in? Is it towards the bridge?
Great for recording and going straight to a PA with a sound engineer, sucks through an amp.
https://shoppingcart.djangobooks.com/it ... mount.html