Sean Gallagher
January 12th, 2005, 07:50 AM
Hi, just bought a Sennheiser MKE 300D mic for my Canon XM2 (GL2). The idea behind this purchase was to allow me to capture better audio towards the focal point, or sound from the object I am focusing on. I have a few questions if anyone can help:
1. I understand this is a mono mic, with mono jack. But how do I set my Canon GL2 to record mono on both "channels", i.e. left and right? At the moment, I am only getting audio on the left channel, the opposite audio channel is silent?
2. The model I ordered was the Sennheiser MKE 300 "D" model. But the only apparent differentiator I can see is a lable on the box that says MKE300D. The actual mic is marked as MKE300 - no "D". Have I been sold the anologue version, or does the "D" model also just display MKE300?
3. Having read many reports on audio quality using the Canon GL2 built in mic, I decided to get this Sennheisser to capture clearer, crisp audio. Perhaps I have a dud unit or am doing something wrong but I must say that so far, I am not all impressed with the audio. At best, it is marginally better than the built in mic, certainly not worth anywhere near £155.00 I paid. Can anyone confirm just how much better the audio should be?. I have tried recording from close to far and the improvement is only marginal. I actually sold a Ross mic for a fiver that had comparible sound to this over priced piece of plastic. Any advice would be welcome. Thanks.
1. I understand this is a mono mic, with mono jack. But how do I set my Canon GL2 to record mono on both "channels", i.e. left and right? At the moment, I am only getting audio on the left channel, the opposite audio channel is silent?
2. The model I ordered was the Sennheiser MKE 300 "D" model. But the only apparent differentiator I can see is a lable on the box that says MKE300D. The actual mic is marked as MKE300 - no "D". Have I been sold the anologue version, or does the "D" model also just display MKE300?
3. Having read many reports on audio quality using the Canon GL2 built in mic, I decided to get this Sennheisser to capture clearer, crisp audio. Perhaps I have a dud unit or am doing something wrong but I must say that so far, I am not all impressed with the audio. At best, it is marginally better than the built in mic, certainly not worth anywhere near £155.00 I paid. Can anyone confirm just how much better the audio should be?. I have tried recording from close to far and the improvement is only marginal. I actually sold a Ross mic for a fiver that had comparible sound to this over priced piece of plastic. Any advice would be welcome. Thanks.