Marc Safran
August 24th, 2004, 02:49 PM
I would appreciate your knowledge on what volume levels one should aim for when recording with the VX2000 in manual audio mode.
I have followed the large number of threads in these forums and just purchased the Beachtek DVA-8 and an Octava MC012 mike with a hypercardiod capsule for my VX2000.
Being a novice to audio I am just experimenting with the equipment. It seems that if I keep the manual gain on low to medium (let's say 40%) then I need to keep the Beachtek's gain to maximum to get a strong signal as heard on my headphones or seen thru the cameras audio meter when I record dialogue at home.
What level of signal does one want? When I crank up the manual gain on the VX2000 I get a stronger signal but the noise seems to increase. If the manual gain is more moderate the overall signal is quieter (and less robust) but there is less noise.
My NLE is Vegas and I also use Sound Forge - two applications that allow me to easily compress the audio and apply AGC and the like.
Sorry for the open-ended question. I just would like a good approach to use these new and relatively expensive pieces of equipment.
Thanks,
MarcS
I have followed the large number of threads in these forums and just purchased the Beachtek DVA-8 and an Octava MC012 mike with a hypercardiod capsule for my VX2000.
Being a novice to audio I am just experimenting with the equipment. It seems that if I keep the manual gain on low to medium (let's say 40%) then I need to keep the Beachtek's gain to maximum to get a strong signal as heard on my headphones or seen thru the cameras audio meter when I record dialogue at home.
What level of signal does one want? When I crank up the manual gain on the VX2000 I get a stronger signal but the noise seems to increase. If the manual gain is more moderate the overall signal is quieter (and less robust) but there is less noise.
My NLE is Vegas and I also use Sound Forge - two applications that allow me to easily compress the audio and apply AGC and the like.
Sorry for the open-ended question. I just would like a good approach to use these new and relatively expensive pieces of equipment.
Thanks,
MarcS