Chris Harding
November 13th, 2009, 02:55 AM
Hi All
A quick question about camera audio (let's say a radio lapel mic on the groom at a wedding??) What should an ideal peak level be assuming that there is little or no background noise and conditions are fairly good??
I figured out by using my HMC72 in auto mode and let the elctronic decide an optimal level (there is only auto "level" control on these cameras so you get a pretty good signal and once it's set it stays there even during silence not like the terrible "pumping" audio the old camcorders used to have!!)
If I record with the lapel indoors with a low ambient level and let auto do the work, the peak level never went over -2.1db on a 5 minute test of talking and not talking. I usually, however use the radio mic via the XLR input on manual and tend to get around -4db peaks.
(In manual, I have excluded thing like "clearing your throat")
Is there any "official" audio level that would be deemed ideal so you could leave the slider on 0db and get pretty much great audio levels???
Chris
A quick question about camera audio (let's say a radio lapel mic on the groom at a wedding??) What should an ideal peak level be assuming that there is little or no background noise and conditions are fairly good??
I figured out by using my HMC72 in auto mode and let the elctronic decide an optimal level (there is only auto "level" control on these cameras so you get a pretty good signal and once it's set it stays there even during silence not like the terrible "pumping" audio the old camcorders used to have!!)
If I record with the lapel indoors with a low ambient level and let auto do the work, the peak level never went over -2.1db on a 5 minute test of talking and not talking. I usually, however use the radio mic via the XLR input on manual and tend to get around -4db peaks.
(In manual, I have excluded thing like "clearing your throat")
Is there any "official" audio level that would be deemed ideal so you could leave the slider on 0db and get pretty much great audio levels???
Chris