I have looked at the other post, where someone said the solution was to do stuff with the mic settings in Game Bar, but this did nothing. Furthermore, the soundboard is practically inaudible in the Discord
We are choosing between Camc Clio with Straight soundboard and Extended soundboard. I think the two soundboards will generate different bass volume, so the left hand has to play with a different strength at the bass strings, hence affecting the harp learning experience.
The fact is, even brand new Steinways have varying quality of soundboards from one piano to the next. It is as much art as science crafting a soundboard in a piano. So, if you replace the soundboard in your piano, only then will you discover what sound the instrument will have.
Even if the soundboard on your piano had cracks or separation of the seams, a good rebuilder can rework the board and get excellent results if done properly. If the soundboard on your piano has no issues and exhibits good crown essential for proper tone, I personally would feel comfortable utilizing it when rebuilding the piano. If the piano is in good enough condition to assess the quality of the tone, that would be extremely valuable in determining the best course of action. If the piano projects a powerful, sustained tone into the high register, then it will probably do a good job for you after rebuilding.
So the reason why that is, is that soundboard is playing to your audio output... If you want it to play to Discord, you need to create a virtual audio interface that sits in between your mic and discord and daisy chain in the soundboard.
I help run the soundboard and computer at church, and we just replaced our computer. At first, everything was fine- Audacity was recording our messages with no problems. Then we had the need to add another monitor (to display the song lyrics through projectors). Well, to do that we had to connect the 2nd monitor with an HDMI cable, using an HDMI converter. Well, once we connected the 2nd monitor with the HDMI cable, Audacity would no longer recognize audio coming through the microphone (trying to record the messages). It will still record anything coming from the computer, but does not recognize any sound coming from the microphone, which is wireless, connected to the soundboard, which is connected to the computer.
First, you can connect the cameras mic input to the headphone output on the soundboard which works OK if you split it, have two outputs, or don't care about using a headset. Another problem is you have to use the same volume as the headset, which can sometimes be a problem, especially if you're not the one running the board.
As well as the 30-minute time limit, the camera also has to stop recording if it reaches 4 GB per file because of the formatting Canon DSLRs use.
If that is a big problem for you, you could look into getting a Canon Vixia series camcorder. That is what I used for quite a while recording the audio straight from a soundboard. My particular model was an HF M50. If you purchase a camcorder because of the recording capabilities, you'll want to take a look and make sure that it has a headphone output as well, which is extremely handy.
Hi! I've seen other software out there for soundboards and I've played around with Keyboard Maestro and I found it to be really useful. For the soundboard, I have been able to bind a key to play a sound but is it possible to route this sound output to my mic (meaning if I'm in a call and activate the hotkey, it can be heard by others).
For anyone who runs their RPG in Roll20, here is how to create a Syrinscape Soundboard that your players can use within Roll20 (no API required)
Step-by-step guide here: -syrinscape-soundboard
I'm trying to find a way to play audio from flash soundboards to people on skype. I apparently do not have Wave/Stereo mix/What u hear supported on my soundcard (I have windows 7 professional). I only have one soundcard, and I'm usually using headset.
If your soundboard is not being transmitted to the game that you are currently playing (League of Legends, Valorant, GTA, Rust...) or you are not able to make keybinds, this could be related to your Windows permissions.
Also, make sure that if you have your microphone configured in your game or software to "Push to talk" you will need to press the "Push to talk" key for the soundboard sounds to go through.
If still, you are facing issues, please try the following:
Hello fellow iMac'ers, got a brand iMac with OSX Mavericks. I'm trying to set it up to record sound from a Peavey XR1212. I'm a PC guy, so I'm used to using Audacity to do the same procedure, so I downloaded it and tried to get it to work. The soundboard has an "mp3 in" line as well as an RCA out jack. The iMac does not have a mic in line, only a headphone port. I called Apple Support and the representative informed me that the headphone port on the Mac is smart enough to determine whether I would be using it for headphones of a mic in line, so I should put the mic in line there. So my set up was running an RCA jack (red and white connected to soundboard) with a headphone jack on the other end into the headphone port on the Mac. When I began recording on the through Audacity, the program did not show me the soundboard or the RCA jack as one of the available options to choose to record sound from, it defaulted to the internal mic on the Mac as the only option.
I did not try going from the "mp3 in" line from the soundboard (which btw is a headphone port as well) to the headphone port on the back of the Mac. I use an auxiliary cord to play music from the Mac through the soundboard with these headphone ports, but it just didn't seem obvious to me that this set up could be used for recording.
While I was downloading Audacity, the Mac was updating garageband, which I have little to no familiarity with. I have done some research and found out that I could potentially use this to record from my soundboard as well. So finally here is my questions:
1) The back of the iMac has 4 USB ports, 1 FireWire port, 1 headphone port and 1 ethernet port. Since there is no "mic-in" port, what port can I use to record audio from the soundboard in audacity or garageband?
If you already had a custom soundboard that you designed that did the same thing, you might have a gripe, but there is a world of difference between adding some sound files to a virtual pinball vs designing, supporting and selling a piece of hardware.
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