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4 - hooking up audio and midi to the us-122, Hooking up audio, Hooking up midi – Teac US-122 User Manual

Page 16: 4 hooking up audio and midi to the us-122, Hooking up audio hooking up midi, 4 – hooking up audio and midi to the us-122

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16

— TASCAM US-122

4 – Hooking up Audio and MIDI to the US-122

Hooking up audio

To monitor output from your computer,
connect the analog outputs of the US-
122 to your mixer, amplifier or powered
monitors. Output volume is controlled
by the

LINE OUT

level control.

To record audio from the US-122 into
your computer, simply connect a device
to the appropriate input. Microphones
should be plugged into the

L

and

R

MIC

IN

XLR inputs.

NOTE

The US-122 can supply phantom power, so
if you’re using condenser microphones, you
will not need an external preamp or power
supply.

You can connect line-level sources (e.g.
keyboards and sound modules) into one
of the two

LINE/GUITAR IN

jacks (

L

or

R

). If you wish to plug in a guitar, bass,

or other high-impedance source, simply
move the appropriate sliding switch to
the

GUITAR

position.

The inputs of the L and R channels are
available as either balanced XLR mic-
level inputs, or balanced (1/4") line-level

inputs (unbalanced when used as guitar
inputs).

While it’s possible to use both mic and
line level analog inputs simultaneously
on either input, in actual practice this is
not recommended, as the signal level of
the inputs will be summed and very
likely interfere with each other.

Input level is regulated by the

INPUT

level controls. The

INPUT

level controls

directly affect the input level at the A/D
converters on the US-122, so it’s advis-
able to use the

SIGNAL

and

OVER

indi-

cators to help set your levels. Unlike
analog tape, when recording digital
audio, it’s important to keep your input
level close to 0dB, but never to exceed it.
If the input level is too high, the audio
signal will clip - not a desirable sound. If
the input level is too low, then the
dynamic range of which the US-122’s A/
D converters are capable is not being
used, and the signal will be closer to the
noise floor than it needs to be. In either
case, this cannot be fixed after the tracks
have been recorded, so it’s important to
make this adjustment carefully.

Hooking up MIDI

The

MIDI IN

and

OUT

jacks give you 16

channels of MIDI I/O. Simply connect
the MIDI OUT of your keyboard or
other device to the

MIDI IN

jack on the

US-122, and vice versa. If you’ve got a
MIDI sync box, you can use the MIDI
ports to send and receive MTC (MIDI

Time Code). This allows you to sync
tracks from your MTC-capable Portastu-
dio, DTRS multitrack, or any other
machine that accepts timecode with your
digital audio software, transferring
tracks back and forth for editing and pro-
cessing.