Aaron Leung
October 15th, 2010, 03:31 PM
Hi all,
For those experienced dslr/h4n users, may I pick you brain a little? Do you advise to use the h4n as a "shootgun" mic and "line in" into the canon 60d audio in (set the audio to manual). My thinking is that the audio is recorded onto the clip and I don't have to manually sync the sound.
I just got the h4n 1 hr ago and am attempting to do the above. One thing I noticed is that the mic on the h4n is very sensitive. It is picking up some of my movements noise and sound from the camera. Just wandering if there is anywhere I could position the h4n (or via settings in the h4n) to minimize such "noise" and sensitivity?!
Note: I know that the h4n is not really meant to be a "shootgun" mic and while I don't have a "shootgun" mic yet, I figure it sure beat the built-in mic from the camera.
Any pointers appreciated.
Aa
For those experienced dslr/h4n users, may I pick you brain a little? Do you advise to use the h4n as a "shootgun" mic and "line in" into the canon 60d audio in (set the audio to manual). My thinking is that the audio is recorded onto the clip and I don't have to manually sync the sound.
I just got the h4n 1 hr ago and am attempting to do the above. One thing I noticed is that the mic on the h4n is very sensitive. It is picking up some of my movements noise and sound from the camera. Just wandering if there is anywhere I could position the h4n (or via settings in the h4n) to minimize such "noise" and sensitivity?!
Note: I know that the h4n is not really meant to be a "shootgun" mic and while I don't have a "shootgun" mic yet, I figure it sure beat the built-in mic from the camera.
Any pointers appreciated.
Aa