Jacques Mersereau
November 2nd, 2002, 10:40 AM
Here at The U of Michigan, we recently purchased an inexpensive wireless mic system, the Azden UDR400.
Now, I could go through all the specs.,
but that would really be a waste of time, because IMO Azden is lying (or a brand new unit has problems).
We opened the box. I was impressed with the bomb proof components, but because both the transmitter and receiver are rather _large_ and bomb proof, they are pretty heavy. Well, . . . maybe that's cool.
We took and hooked it up to a mackie mixer and
got out four mics. Two plain ol' Shure SM58s and two Beta 87 condensers. We were excited that the
Azden transmitter provided phantom power and could
therefore be used with the higher end Beta 87s.
First, we plugged in one Beta with a wire and plugged the other to the transmitter. I brought up the first mic's level and it sounded good. Now, I fully expected the wireless not to sound as good as the wireless, but the wireless was dead. Hmmm.
Checked the phantom switch . . . it was on.
Tried swapping channels and made sure that those
were correctly set. Nothing.
Okay, we'll try the SM58. The wired one came up in the PA no problem. Plugged the other into the
transmitter and sure enough this mic worked.
Bottom line, the Azden transmitter does not provide sufficient phantom power to make the beta 87 come alive. LAME. Really lame.
Well, that doesn't necessarily cripple this purchase. I got the gain structure set so that
we were not overloading the receiver. The resulting sound was muffled while exhibiting quite a bit of high end "hash". Bringing up the highs on the EQ didn't help the sound much, but did result
in amplifying the hash. Yeach.
Well, this system is pretty inexpensive, lets take a walk around the studio and see how well the
"true" UHF diversity system does with drop outs.
Again, the hash was constantly changing as we walked around the room, and at times the signal was dropping out. The drop outs were quick, but . . . ugh. We were never further than 40 ft from the receiver and nothing was blocking the radio signal's path.
In summary, you still get what you pay for, and in this case, we got less than we paid for. The system is going back to Fullcompass.
Now, I could go through all the specs.,
but that would really be a waste of time, because IMO Azden is lying (or a brand new unit has problems).
We opened the box. I was impressed with the bomb proof components, but because both the transmitter and receiver are rather _large_ and bomb proof, they are pretty heavy. Well, . . . maybe that's cool.
We took and hooked it up to a mackie mixer and
got out four mics. Two plain ol' Shure SM58s and two Beta 87 condensers. We were excited that the
Azden transmitter provided phantom power and could
therefore be used with the higher end Beta 87s.
First, we plugged in one Beta with a wire and plugged the other to the transmitter. I brought up the first mic's level and it sounded good. Now, I fully expected the wireless not to sound as good as the wireless, but the wireless was dead. Hmmm.
Checked the phantom switch . . . it was on.
Tried swapping channels and made sure that those
were correctly set. Nothing.
Okay, we'll try the SM58. The wired one came up in the PA no problem. Plugged the other into the
transmitter and sure enough this mic worked.
Bottom line, the Azden transmitter does not provide sufficient phantom power to make the beta 87 come alive. LAME. Really lame.
Well, that doesn't necessarily cripple this purchase. I got the gain structure set so that
we were not overloading the receiver. The resulting sound was muffled while exhibiting quite a bit of high end "hash". Bringing up the highs on the EQ didn't help the sound much, but did result
in amplifying the hash. Yeach.
Well, this system is pretty inexpensive, lets take a walk around the studio and see how well the
"true" UHF diversity system does with drop outs.
Again, the hash was constantly changing as we walked around the room, and at times the signal was dropping out. The drop outs were quick, but . . . ugh. We were never further than 40 ft from the receiver and nothing was blocking the radio signal's path.
In summary, you still get what you pay for, and in this case, we got less than we paid for. The system is going back to Fullcompass.