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  • recording speaker

    Posted by Matt on May 6, 2005 at 5:03 pm

    I need to videotape a speaker in a small room with an audience of around 20 people, I am shooting with a sony DSR PD170, what is the best way to record the audio. The speaker does like to walk around.
    I recorded him last month and I used a wireless lav, but there was a little hum or noise that I couldn’t get rid of. I’m thinking it was the lav I used, so I was thinking of getting a better quality lav this time. Should I have sent the lav through a mixer?
    Does anyone have any better solutions or ideas?
    Thanks guys.

    Ty Ford replied 20 years, 11 months ago 6 Members · 8 Replies
  • 8 Replies
  • Nothing beats a good lav (say a Tram TR50) connected via a balanced CABLE.
    Your next best is using a very GOOD-QUALITY wireless system ($650-$1200 purchase price-point.)

    Lectrosonics
    https://www.lectrosonics.com/wireless/wireless.htm

    or high-end Sony are good choices.

    You can rent them.

    A mixer is fine to use, but the lack of one was NOT the cause of your noise problem.

  • R Lague

    May 8, 2005 at 3:53 am

    cheap wireless is almost always noisy. A wired lav Audio Technica will sound great if the speaker can handle the cord. otherwise, rent a good wireless. or buy on for 800-1000.

  • Is there an echo in here?

    😉

    [Matte] “Nothing beats a good lav (say a Tram TR50) connected via a balanced CABLE.
    Your next best is using a very GOOD-QUALITY wireless system ($650-$1200 purchase price-point.) “

    [r lague] “cheap wireless is almost always noisy. A wired lav Audio Technica will sound great if the speaker can handle the cord. otherwise, rent a good wireless. or buy on for 800-1000. “

  • Ty Ford

    May 9, 2005 at 1:24 am

    Could be the lav. Could be the way you connected the gear. No way to say for sure. How did you have the lav connected…..details.

    Regards,

    Ty Ford

    Ty Ford’s “Audio Bootcamp Field Guide” was written for video people who want better audio. Find out more at https://www.tyford.com

  • Matt

    May 9, 2005 at 4:23 am

    I had the Lav connected to xlr input 1 on my camera (Sony DSR PD170). I had the input level on mic and chanel 1 selected. Not sure what this is but I had +48V on.

  • Peter Perry

    May 11, 2005 at 12:56 am

    [matt] “there was a little hum or noise that I couldn’t get rid of. “

    Was this acoustic noise or electrical? What kind of wireless were you using?
    Peter

  • Matt

    May 11, 2005 at 1:46 pm

    The noise sounded electrical, almost like a hissing sound. I was using a shure ULX-Standard wireless system.

  • Ty Ford

    May 14, 2005 at 2:02 am

    Hum is one thing, hiss is something else. If it was hiss, it could be that you set the record level low enough to put the signal in the noise floor.

    Sometimes a person SpeaKs with a veRy erratiC patTern. If you Try TO SET the level ProPERly, ThEY end up peaking. That’s when a mixer with a good limiter comes in very handy.

    See what the playback levels are. If you had to boost it during playback until you could hear the hiss, you recorded at too low a level.

    Regards,

    Ty Forde

    Ty Ford’s “Audio Bootcamp Field Guide” was written for video people who want better audio. Find out more at https://www.tyford.com

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