FireBox vs. Audio Buddy
FireBox vs. Audio Buddy
So, er, up until now I've been using the M-Audio Audio Buddy preamp for recording. (Mic -> Audio Buddy -> 1/4 to 1/8 cable -> Mic jack on the front of my PC. Monitored through the headphone jack on my PC.) This worked fine enough for a while, but I was ready to upgrade. So, I bought the PreSonus FireBox, assuming it would be higher fidelity, lower latency, and have better pre's and converters.
But... is/does it really?
I don't know if it's not set up right, or I'm too tired, or what, but I'm really questioning if I made the right choice. I just can't tell.
Gods of home recording, let your wisdom flow forth. (Please!)
But... is/does it really?
I don't know if it's not set up right, or I'm too tired, or what, but I'm really questioning if I made the right choice. I just can't tell.
Gods of home recording, let your wisdom flow forth. (Please!)
- Adam!
- Niemöller
- Posts: 1433
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 11:10 am
- Instruments: Drum 'n' Bass (but not THAT Drum 'n' Bass)
- Recording Method: Reaper + Stock Plugins
- Submitting as: Max Bombast
- Pronouns: he/him
- Location: Victoria, BC, AwesomeLand
- Contact:
I've heard good things about the FireBox, and consider it comparable/superior in quality to the UA-25, which is the only remotely fancy recording device I've used. For recording simple sources like vocals and direct-in guitars I honestly don't think A/D converter quality will make a perceivable difference (people will shout and holler otherwise, but I think they've been reading too many hardware press kits and editorials). The latency should be much much better than you were getting from your stock sound card, and should be about the same as any ASIO interface. I assume the pre-amps are good, better than the instrument pre on the UA-25 (it's a little noisy), although I really like the soft limiting that the UA-25's pres do: it has saved a few of my vocal takes. I'm assuming the FireBox does that too. Last of all, I'm a huge fan of the impedance matching on the UA's instrument pre, because it audibly improves my recorded guitar tone. Again, I'd be suprised if the FireBox didn't do this.
So, I think it's a wise upgrade, assuming your other gear matches its quality. If I recall you had your eyes set on the B1 (just read your email on the subject. Oh man, I'm so behind on reading/answering emails...), which should be a good match. Just don't use a cruddy dynamic with the FB, because then the quality bottleneck would be the mic and not the interface.
Having done the Mic -> Pre-amp -> Mixer -> mono 1/8" -> stereo 1/4" -> cheap soundcard in a poorly grounded chassis forever, I can easily say that I prefer the simplicity of going straight in. The boosted sound quality and reduced noise doesn't hurt, either.
EDIT: Plus the FB apparently comes with a silly little version of Cubase, which is absolutely great software to get into.
So, I think it's a wise upgrade, assuming your other gear matches its quality. If I recall you had your eyes set on the B1 (just read your email on the subject. Oh man, I'm so behind on reading/answering emails...), which should be a good match. Just don't use a cruddy dynamic with the FB, because then the quality bottleneck would be the mic and not the interface.
Having done the Mic -> Pre-amp -> Mixer -> mono 1/8" -> stereo 1/4" -> cheap soundcard in a poorly grounded chassis forever, I can easily say that I prefer the simplicity of going straight in. The boosted sound quality and reduced noise doesn't hurt, either.
EDIT: Plus the FB apparently comes with a silly little version of Cubase, which is absolutely great software to get into.
Hey, man. Good to see you again! Heh.
Yeah, I've slept on it, and I'm feelin' pretty good now. When I was testing it out last night, we had three computers running, someone was watching TV, and I had a huge headache. But it seems worth it now, if not for the lack of cables/latency alone.
All I have is cruddy dynamic mics at this point, but I'm hoping to change that right quick. Should I go for the B1 or C1? I didn't realize they were different til just now.
Yeah, I've slept on it, and I'm feelin' pretty good now. When I was testing it out last night, we had three computers running, someone was watching TV, and I had a huge headache. But it seems worth it now, if not for the lack of cables/latency alone.
All I have is cruddy dynamic mics at this point, but I'm hoping to change that right quick. Should I go for the B1 or C1? I didn't realize they were different til just now.
- ken
- Roosevelt
- Posts: 3918
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 6:10 pm
- Instruments: Guitar, bass, drums, keys
- Recording Method: Audient Sono, MOTU 828x, Cubase
- Submitting as: Ken's Super Duper Band 'n Stuff
- Pronouns: he/him
- Location: oakland, ca
- Contact:
I would think the immediate benfit would be that the Firebox can record at 24bit while your stock soundcard 16. The drivers are probably more stable and pehaps, the preamps are slightly nicer.
Ken
Ken
Ken's Super Duper Band 'n Stuff - Berkeley Social Scene - Tiny Robots - Seamus Collective - Semolina Pilchards - Cutie Pies - Explino! - Bravo Bros. - 2 from 14 - and more!
i would just like to remind everyone that Ken eats kittens - blue lang
i would just like to remind everyone that Ken eats kittens - blue lang
- Adam!
- Niemöller
- Posts: 1433
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 11:10 am
- Instruments: Drum 'n' Bass (but not THAT Drum 'n' Bass)
- Recording Method: Reaper + Stock Plugins
- Submitting as: Max Bombast
- Pronouns: he/him
- Location: Victoria, BC, AwesomeLand
- Contact:
I plan on getting a new vocal condenser, because my current one is a little weird. People tell me that a pair of B1s is great on acoustic guitars and overheads, whereas a C1 is is better on vocals and miscellany. I also mostly want the C1 because of all the crap it comes with: nice case, shock mount, pop filter, a -10 db pad so I can get my scream on, etc.catch wrote:Should I go for the B1 or C1?
- Sober
- Niemöller
- Posts: 1724
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 10:40 am
- Instruments: Pedal steel, mandolin, etc etc
- Recording Method: Pro Tools
- Submitting as: Sober, I'm Steel Learning
- Pronouns: he/him
- Location: Midcoast Maine
Dude, the Firebox blows the Audiobuddy out of the fucking water. Seriously, find out who sold you that Audiobuddy, and go punch that guy in the face. It's pointless.
Now that you have a real interface, you may begin doing worthwhile things.
I'm sorry I didn't offer any concrete/helpful reasons why the Firebox is better, but at this time in the morning, I'm not prepared to compare and contrast a BMW with a unicycle. Maybe later.
Oh, and for a mic, it depends on how much you want to spend, and what you're mainly wanting to record. Most folks around here place priority on vocal mics, which means you'll want a large-diaphragm condenser. Super-cheap means MXL, which is like the Songfight brand*. The AT3035 is a super-solid step-up at $199. A few folks 'round here use them, including me. If you want to spend more than that, step up to the Groove Tubes 66 or the Bluebird, both at $499. More than that, and you have your priorities backwards, which is admirable.
I've never touched the b1 or c1. I'd say stay the fuck away from the b1, because it's made by behringer (ask blue if you're really curious about behringer). Try the c1 if you like, I guess.
*Generalization. Chill.
Now that you have a real interface, you may begin doing worthwhile things.
I'm sorry I didn't offer any concrete/helpful reasons why the Firebox is better, but at this time in the morning, I'm not prepared to compare and contrast a BMW with a unicycle. Maybe later.
Oh, and for a mic, it depends on how much you want to spend, and what you're mainly wanting to record. Most folks around here place priority on vocal mics, which means you'll want a large-diaphragm condenser. Super-cheap means MXL, which is like the Songfight brand*. The AT3035 is a super-solid step-up at $199. A few folks 'round here use them, including me. If you want to spend more than that, step up to the Groove Tubes 66 or the Bluebird, both at $499. More than that, and you have your priorities backwards, which is admirable.
I've never touched the b1 or c1. I'd say stay the fuck away from the b1, because it's made by behringer (ask blue if you're really curious about behringer). Try the c1 if you like, I guess.
*Generalization. Chill.
- ken
- Roosevelt
- Posts: 3918
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 6:10 pm
- Instruments: Guitar, bass, drums, keys
- Recording Method: Audient Sono, MOTU 828x, Cubase
- Submitting as: Ken's Super Duper Band 'n Stuff
- Pronouns: he/him
- Location: oakland, ca
- Contact:
He means the Studio Projects B-1, not Behringer. I used the B-1 almost exclusively for many many years. I think it sounds great for vocals, acoustic, and drum overhead. Blue likes it as a kick drum mic. I haven't used the C-1, but I suspect it has more bells and whistles. I have the C-3, which is a great mic. I am starting to use it more and more.
Ken
Ken
Ken's Super Duper Band 'n Stuff - Berkeley Social Scene - Tiny Robots - Seamus Collective - Semolina Pilchards - Cutie Pies - Explino! - Bravo Bros. - 2 from 14 - and more!
i would just like to remind everyone that Ken eats kittens - blue lang
i would just like to remind everyone that Ken eats kittens - blue lang
-
- Orwell
- Posts: 924
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 5:51 pm
- Instruments: Guitar, Bass, Drums, Mandolin all graded on a sliding scale
- Recording Method: Mixer to a Fostex D-160
- Location: Somewhere in a place called the Midwest
- ken
- Roosevelt
- Posts: 3918
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 6:10 pm
- Instruments: Guitar, bass, drums, keys
- Recording Method: Audient Sono, MOTU 828x, Cubase
- Submitting as: Ken's Super Duper Band 'n Stuff
- Pronouns: he/him
- Location: oakland, ca
- Contact:
I'm pretty sure the Studio Projects B-1 is $20 cheaper. Plus, it probably sounds better.jack wrote:i'm a cheap bastard. what can i say.
Ken
Ken's Super Duper Band 'n Stuff - Berkeley Social Scene - Tiny Robots - Seamus Collective - Semolina Pilchards - Cutie Pies - Explino! - Bravo Bros. - 2 from 14 - and more!
i would just like to remind everyone that Ken eats kittens - blue lang
i would just like to remind everyone that Ken eats kittens - blue lang
- jack
- Roosevelt
- Posts: 3852
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 10:41 am
- Recording Method: ProTools, Logic, Garageband
- Submitting as: brody, Jack Shite, Johnny in the Corner, Bloody Hams, lots more
- Location: santa cruz, ca.
hehe...i don't know how many times we've debated our B-1's....ken wrote:I'm pretty sure the Studio Projects B-1 is $20 cheaper. Plus, it probably sounds better.jack wrote:i'm a cheap bastard. what can i say.
Ken

too many.
on a related topic, i just got a flyer from guitar center running some special on the audio buddy and 2 MXL condensers for $99. that's a deal!
all you productionally-challenged run don't walk to your nearest guitar center.......
Hi!
- Märk
- Churchill
- Posts: 2048
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 8:35 pm
- Instruments: Guitar, bass
- Recording Method: Presonus Audiobox 44VSL, Cubase
- Submitting as: ROTR, svenmullet, I forget what else
- Pronouns: master
- Location: Canada
I dunno, I'm totally impressed with the low price:quality ratio of MXL mics. I bought the deluxe/elite 'Pro' MXL pack for about 300 CAD dollars; this included the afore-mentioned MXL 2003 and 603 mics, a shockmount for each, foam windscreens, 2 XLR cables of the highest quality, and a cool aluminum travel case. I have no complaints.
http://www.fullcompass.com/Products/pages/SKU--77478/
http://www.fullcompass.com/Products/pages/SKU--77478/
* this is not a disclaimer