Thanks grayscale, you're right. in ended up that what i had was feedback coming through and barely any sound at all, just a little bass. I skipped the reciever and hooked the record line out from the mixer directly up to the mic inputs on the omni i/o and put self powered computer speakers on the monitor outs. There are four channels on my mixer and I was using the cd channels instead of the phono channels on it. When I switched to phono the whole thing made more sense and the signal came out better.
Thanks everyone for your advice. It all really helped.

Disko



From: "vincel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


Sounds like you have a low signal problem, -50 and all. If your mixer
doesn't have a decent pre-amp on it you are sending a really low signal to
your receiver, then if the receiver isn't doing it's job, your sound card is
getting hardly anything. Make sure the signal is amped up somehow. A real
mixing console will usually do the trick if you go through a bus, not a tape
input. Try some different routing I'm sure you'll nail it sooner or later.
Hope this helps. If it's not a signal problem then dunno. Must be your sound
card settings.

ez,

-grayscale-

>
> Hi,
>
> I have my mixer hooked up to my receiver which is hooked up (by RCA) to a
> midiman omni i/o in the mic inputs. So far I've tried recording on Cubase
> VST32, Sonar 1.0, Cool Edit 2.0 and Acid Pro 3.0. On the first three
> programs, the audio would show as upto -50 dB in the console while I'm
> recording but no audio is actually recorded. Why could this be happening?
>
> Thanks in advance,
> Disko

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