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Most buzzes are caused by one of two things: "DIRTY" power or a lifted\non-existent ground. Allow me to explain;
"DIRTY" power is just that. It comes in and carries a lot of static with it. Most newer systems have filters built in on the power side of the main board. The fix? Try running your Magic Sing from a wall socket that doesn't have anything else pulling from that particular circuit. You should also invest in a GOOD power strip and not one that cost $5-$10 bucks. All these are good for is getting power to multiple products simultaneously, AND they don't have the resistors and filters to give you a constant 120v AC.
Monster Cable Co. was a very sought after item up to the point to where Radio Shack no longer carried their products.
If you really want to get your money's worth out of the instruments you buy, don't slack on the power strip. This will be the most costly mistake ANYONE can make.
Here is an article that explains what I did and gives you answers on how to fix this issue.
You'll need to connect both your PC and the Mic to the mixer, you'll need phantom power switched on at the mixer for the mic to work, you then take the two track out to the Aux input on the receiver.
No - you use these with a microphone. Plug you guitar into the Heil, put the tube in your moth and sing into a mic while playing. You CAN plug the microphone into the fender amp, but a PA system is better
Set the voice input level on the voicelive2 by following this guide from the live 2 manual...
Step 4: Set Mic Level
This step informs VoiceLive 2 how loud you plan to
sing with your particular mic. We'll use VoiceLive 2's
automatic MIC GAIN feature to quickly set the optimum
level.
1. Press and hold the REVERB footswitch
2. If you need to activate phantom power for your
condenser mic, adjust the onscreen PHANTOM
parameter which will restart the level test
2. Sing for five seconds with peaks that are as loud as
you plan to sing
3. Follow the prompts in the display to finalize mic
level setting, cancel or redo the procedure
During performance, if you see the CLIP indicator light
in the HOME screen, you can return to the automatic MIC GAIN feature to adjust the input level.
When input level is set on the voice live ;
on the mixer set the gain control to 12 o'clock position and
individual channel volume level to 7 ....raise the master volume
slider to hear mic input at desired level and without feedback
If you read the TRUE specs on this speaker it is really a 200 Watt RMS unit. Make sure you are using balanced lines to the speaker XLR or TRS cables. The mixer should NOT be a passive mixer as these do NOT generate true balanced lines. Make sure the mic can't "hear" the speaker or you may be getting supersonic feedback that is above your hearing range that saturates the amp. If *********** can't stand to be ain a 15 foot square room with teh level you are generating, it is TOO loud for this unit to handle.
It is likely soldered into the circuit board. It may be any of several part numbers such as 7805.
Try to read ANY number you can off the IC itself... the last two digits are the voltage... 7805, 7812, 7815 are common ones... There often is a production lot number... see if you can find the number ang et back to me as email.
The music to sing along with apparently MUST come from a disk played on the unit. It appears that the external audio jacks are just to use the unit as either a boombox or to drive a larger sound system. You will have to convert your IPOD music into a Karaoke compatible CD to be able to sing along with it... They probably detect MIC input and mute any incoming signals from the RCA jack inputs,
You could record short "samples" to be used in building new voices, however, it does NOT appear that you can record a vocal song with the PSR9000. The Tyros II and III have the capability to record vocals but the PSR9000 and Tyros I do not..
When playing back an arrangement, you can re-sing the song and have the vocal harmonizer track the arrangement.
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