You're incredible. You've explained this topic to me in a clear and understandable way. Looking forward to finally having my mic sound good. Thank you so much.
Thank you SOOO much for this video. This is the very first time that a video has helped me with my microphone issues, especially since i've been watching so many without them helping me much with the sound quality of my mic but now it sounds INCREDIBLE
Thank you so much!! It helped me much more than other videos in my language, which is Spanish, that I have seen, it is the best video that best explains this equalizer that I have seen! again thank you very much and greetings!! from Sonora! Mexico!
I liked t he video, only part i got lost is when adding the compressor through VST as per what you were doing on the video i didn't get the same thing open. I got the same bands kinda option as earlier in the video but clearly an issue on my end! Thanks!
I always use the limiter filter in OBS for my audience mix. If you are using the Wave XLR, Wavelink has the clip guard function which eliminates the need for a limiter on your mic. It will detect clipping and reroute/replace the clipped audio with a reduced signal (I think it is -6dB).
my reaper plugins weren't showing up in OBS unless I directly downloaded them to C\Program Files\VSTPlugins (I had to make that folder to download to) now they finally show up in OBS but I can't open the plugin interfaces for ANY of the filters. Been searching all over for answers. Did this a couple months ago and everything worked first time flawlessly, but I just got a fresh install of windows and now none of the reaplugs are working.
They are trained, and you really need to use quality headphones or speaker monitors to listen. The changes made are subtle for me since the Podmic I use itself is tuned fairly well already. Put your head in a box, talk in it at normal talking volume and then do it out of the box, like normal. Then, you'll know the difference.
Probably a lot of room verb. Making sure you speak close into the mic while using enough gain to get a good level from your voice without overdoing it is my first recommendation. AI Noise Suppression should help with that some. You can also find the offending frequencies and cut them in an EQ to reduce it.
@@FrugalStreamer my setup is against the wall, so it might be verb. I cant get my mic any closer without an arm or something. But with how hard it is to get subs, its not easy for me to spend $30+ on something that might just end up in the closet forgotten.
When you are doing the EQ settings and you are on the #2 tab, would you want to also sweep for boxy sounding frequencies and lower gain there as well if there are any?
Sorry, edited response. You could. It's up to you. With ReEQ, you can add as many bands as you need and you could use them for whatever you need to do. I just try to keep things in order for my own sanity.
I use the OBS monitor function when tuning the mic and checking to make sure it sounds good. Otherwise, I don't listen to myself when streaming. I feel there's no need to.
Is there a good way to hear your mic while you're doing this if it doesnt have a monitor bus? I tried using OBS's monitor setting but it sounds completely different than the recordings and I'm really struggling to figure it out at this point :(
Well, Windows has a monitor function in it for any recording sources, but that will also be pre-processed. It is interesting why the monitor sounds different than your records, because it shouldn't. I will look into that and see if I can reproduce something similar.