Ok so I was getting worried I thought I just bought the wrong item. You’re the only person to actually show and explain the inputs and outputs. Bravo!!!
Thanks. I was looking to buy something similar and now I know what :D And there are adapters with male XLR to standard mono 6.35 female jack that cost around 3 eur so you don't need to make special cables just for the box.
thanks a lot for this video. this is what I really need to make wife live in peace. She really find it so annoying everytime I'm playing my guitar. Now I won't have to make her feel bothered with my passion. happy wife, happy life... indeed. 🤣🤣🤣 thank you sir.
I’m glad it would work for you!👍 having a happy wife is really important I have another video on recording at home as well, I’m not sure if it would be of any help, but you could have a look and see 🤷♂️👍
Nice video, but you wont short anything, when plugging connectors into something. Imagine if that would happen every time you plug something into the wall.
excellent video. please pay attention to how you coil your cables, i nearly chocked when i saw your headphone haha. cable coiling is the first thing i learn in my audio engineering class. thank you
I'm looking for a bit of a boost to the signal from my condenser mic to my Tascam Portastudio as the gain is already at max and isn't really enough. Will using one of these give me that boost?
Prince Peniel it just gives you the instrument out. It’s for use on stage to send your instrument to the FOH or stage amp or in a recording scenario.. ☺️
Thanks for asking this Prince. BTW@@joshlance7 would the MIC LEVEL Knob affect the signal level going out of the MIC THRU..or it's dedicated for the earphones only?
Well I think there should not be a drop in the signal but to be honest, I haven’t measured it or thought of it.. it worked peacefully so I reckon it should be alright
What does the “Mic Thru” does? I am planning to place the band monitor into the monitor in, and then the microphone of my guitar amplifier into the mic in, and then from the mic thru, it will send my raw guitar signal to the mixing system. Is my concept correct? Thanks a lot!
I'm thinking about buying this for gaming. my new sound card doesn't have mic monitoring and when I have my headphones on its hard to tell how loud I'm talking to my team mates because my ears are covered. using windows option to listen to this device isn't any good because it produces a delay that will drive you mad when talking.
Hi Jonathan! They should ideally be used one at a time. It’s not rigged for simultaneous use.. the signal levels drop and it might put a strain on the circuitry..👍
Hey, this was quite informative and I was just looking for this. Have a couple of questions 1) If I use Sennheiser hd380 pro(54 ohms) with this amp, will it be give a decent sound output? 2) if I use TS to male xlr directly, is there any issue OR may I know of there was any specific reason for you to couple the female xlr to m-m xlr
You’re welcome! 1. Mostly they all work with a little plus minus but the job gets done and decently 2. Normally a TS has two signal wires whereas an XLR has three, so it depends on the internal wiring of the converter you’re using.. I remember once buying a direct converter of the brand bespeco and it just didn’t work. Had to get my own converter wired up and all was good😊👍
Hey Joshua, I am a gaming content creator, so my use for this sorta thing is a bit different, I plan on buying the Beyerdynamic DT 990 Pro Headphones, as these are 250 ohm headphones and my pc isn't capable of that, would this be able to amplify the headphones up to 250 ohms? So I will be able to hear the audio through my pc from the monitoring port?
Hi, I just wanted to ask you about what exactly the purpose of "Ground Lift"? What is the difference that brings in? I have 6.5 mm jack cable for the instrument (both side 6.5 mm jack) and if i connect it to the Monitor input, will that work? So that I can avoid the XLR adapters? Will that effect my quality, off stage and on stage?
The ground lift works by changing the way the grounding of the product works... it sometimes helps in removing the static buzz. The monitor input is used if you have another track you’d like to hear while playing ....
Hey Joshua ... a million thnx for posting this vid!! I'd like to pick you brain in terms of helping me maximize my setup for practice and live play. Can we chat via Messenger or WhatsApp etc?
@@joshlance7 so can I connect my bass guitar with the ha400 for personal practices just the way you did this one I’m planning on buying the ha400 so after my rehearsal I and my band can also use it during live sessions
@cap_bass it depends on what you and your band want to use it for.. if you plan use it to run a click or a track to listen to while you play, that would work .. the #HA400 is basically a headphone splitter. 1 input : 4 outputs
@@joshlance7 thanks for being patience with me sir 🫡 please one more question , still based on the ha400 How about running a connection like plugging my bass guitar to the input and plugging my in ear to one of the 4 outputs Would it produce That’s if I want to rehearse with no music from my phone
@@Bass_Wills that is a good question.. unfortunately the bass guitar output may not be strong/hot enough to give you a good level.. having said that, you could give it a shot and see how much it would work for you.. plug it in and give it a shot, nothing will blow up😄 Only follow the golden rule.. turn on the #HA400 after everything is plugged in
Sorry about the late replies folks! Was tied up with this! ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-HErzdBYyfsw.html And this ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-ujFE2Ax3j2Q.html
@@joshlance7 No? aux in to plug your phone in for backing track, headphone in to plug your headphone or earbuds + the option to hear amp live sound when headphone is not plugged in, plug the power in and stick your 1/4 from the bass in, it's the exact same thing. I don't see how the purpose is different.
What does the “Mic Thru” does? I am planning to place the band monitor into the monitor in, and then the microphone of my guitar amplifier into the mic in, and then from the mic thru, it will send my raw guitar signal to the mixing system. Is my concept correct? Thanks a lot!
I think it's all ok till the part where you plan to take your microphone of your guitar amplifier to the mic in... basically you can take the out of your guitar processer to the mic in or directly plug in your guitar to the mic in...