Everything I know about math I learned from the professor here.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MS2aEfbEi7s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MS2aEfbEi7s
Math question: Where is zero gain on the Windows 10 level slider?
Everything I know about math I learned from the professor here. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MS2aEfbEi7s |
I would set the Windows level to 100% so that you get the full bandwidth of digital data. The actual "gain" should be configured on the Benchmark ADC itself. Your goal is to get a hot enough signal on the Benchmark input to allow the ADC chip to produce enough "bit level" bandwidth to capture a good enough resolution. Use the LEDs on the front of the Benchmark to adjust your input recording level. |
Hi gweadock, Might be a late response, but I was looking for this exact answer and found your reply. But there is another simple option which I stumbled on. If you right click on the microphone level slider in windows sound control panel for your USB microphone, you will get two options: percentage or decibels Select decibels and it'll be exactly what you want. My zoom H1 USB microphone was +0.1dB at 54 percent level. I found different devices can have a different 0dB point so check yours. Good luck. |
Thank you chocman, you are absolutely right! I never knew that option existed. The award for "most non-obvious setting in Windows" goes to the microphone level slider. I also got +0.1dB at 54 percent with the Benchmark ADC. I may still keep using ASIO4ALL though because it seems to bypass the Windows volume control entirely. Many thanks for the tip! |