Audio Interface Vs Amplifier
It seems that an audio interface would be a little more desirable for your use.
Audio interface vs amplifier. So now let s jump in and find out how an audio interface works. An audio interface has ports on the front and the back. Recording and separate volume control for the monitors you might consider buying a used audio interface off ebay. An audio interface is especially important if you want to record more than one element of a song at once for example voice and guitar.
An audio interface might decently drive the 80 ohm dt770 headphone. I don t know the science of output impedance vs headphone impedance but i really recommend you trying things out without an amp first. Long story short if you re. For example a microphone outputs a very weak signal that needs to be boosted to the same level as other signals by a preamplifier before it can be processed by another device like a mixer receiver or.
A headphone amplifier is the answer. An audio interface takes the signals from your instruments or microphones and digitizes them before sending them to your computer. The dt770 80 ohm do like a decent amount of power to be driven to their best. It seems to work just fine without an audio interface though i m noticing that the quality of the audio is sub par.
Headphones and most headphone amplifiers are designed for unbalanced. The behringer calls itself a preamp not an audio interface but i m able to plug my mic into it and then from there into the computer directly. My 250 ohm beyers sounded fine out of an m audio interface. Audio interfaces are built to accept balanced inputs and outputs.
If you want your recordings to have crisp clean professional sound you do need an audio interface. The interface just couldn t go as loud as an amp. Volume on the interface can be turned to 100 without threatening my ears. Without an audio interface your recordings may sound distant tinny and low quality.
Alas mating pro audio gear with typical headphone amplifiers is less than straightforward. An audio interface is specifically designed to take the sounds from your live audio sources and send them to your computer for playback or recording and unlike the built in 3 5mm microphone jack or sound card on your computer it actually preserves the quality of the sounds which is essential if you want professional sounding audio. This video shows how my voice sounds in the focusrite scarlett 2i4 interface s preamp slot 2nd gen vs using a dedicated preamp hardware rack with a tube amp in it. A preamp boosts a weaker signal to line level while an amplifier boosts a line level signal so that it can be sent to speakers.