Selasa, 14 Januari 2014

Any suggestions for what external mic I should buy for my Canon XL2?

Q. I have acquired a Canon XL2 camcorder for making short films and the like. I'd like to buy a good external mic for recording dialogue and so on, but can't afford to spend more than about £250-£300 tops, including windshield, pole etc (although I'm happy to buy 2nd hand).

What would people suggest is the best all-round option open to me?

A. At that price range you can't do wireless mics, so that's out of the question. So you will have to go shotgun and boom.

I'm adding links to some great articles and test done on different mics from different price ranges. There are some great mics in your price range. Take care.


I'm looking for a hard drive camcorder with an external mic jack?
Q. I am a high school basketball coach and I want a camcorder that records on a hard drive and I want to patch a radio into a external mic jack or an audio in jack.What are my choices for brands and prices??Thanks.

A. To answer your question directly:
Sony HDR-SR11, HDR-SR12
Panasonic *might* have one or two; Canon has none.

Because the crowd noise and possibility of a band or other loud audio, hard disc drive based camcorders are not recommended for your stated environment. The vibration from that loud audio can cause the hard drive heads to park and no video will be recorded. This is a known problem with hard drive based camcorders. So is high altitude, but we won't go there at the moment...

Flash memory and miniDV tape based camcorders do not have this problem with vibration. For standard definition, flash memory, the Canon FS10, FS11 and FS100 have a mic jack; Flash memory camcorders save to the same file formats used by hard drive camcorders. For high definition or standard def miniDV tape, the Canon HV20 and Sony HDR-HC9 meet your requirements. These are all "least expensive" - the issue is getting amic jack - most camcorders do not have this. There are more cameras that cost more that have audio-in capabilities.

For prices, there are two kinds - the ones you can buy and know you will get what you pay for or potential scams. Do comparison pricing - if the price looks too good to be true, it probably is. I have found B&H Photo and Adorama are reputable online dealers. Check at the CNET camcorder forum for horror stories on certain scam sites.

DVD camcorders are useless. Don't waste any time on them.





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