

That converter will take a bit of time to process the electronic signal and turn it into a digital one. This is either in your recording interface or in your computer's sound card. The real problem of latency occurs in everything including and beyond the analog-to-digital converter. But since electricity travels at the speed of light, even this is negligible. Latency defined is a delay between the production of a sound and its reproduction either in playback and monitoring, or in recording with the resulting track and audio dragging behind where it should be.Īny amount of latency that would come from this stage of the recording process would be due to using an enormously long cable. The reason for that is that audio latency delays don't come from the microphone. The Rode NT1-A will handle your concerns just fine, as will any other microphone. Does it have a feature to prevent microphone delay? I was wondering how it performs with audio latency when recording vocals over pre-recorded music tracks. I read your article on home studio mics and I'm higly considering the Rode NT1-A. Where Does Microphone Delay (Audio Latency) Come From? Question:

But we will say that USB microphones are also not the cause of latency, as this occurs, in this case, nearly entirely within the analog-to-digital conversion process in the computer's sound card and within the recording software. It's important to note that the reader is asking about a specific microphone, which narrowed down the explanation. You can also check our deeper, longer exploration of audio latency that we've written since offering this reply. You'll see why as we correct the misconception and explain latency in haste.


And that explains why we received a question that didn't really make sense, related to microphone delay. Not only had we not covered it clearly, but we hadn't touched on it at all. We received a question recently that made us realize that we hadn't covered the topic of audio latency.
