Frederic Gittler
May 13th, 2007, 11:40 AM
I am searching for the best wind protection for a shotgun microphone (AT835ST, if it matters) mounted on-camera, ENG style. This means the zeppelin-style full enclosure windshield is not an option. Note that I live in Europe, where relative pricing is not the same as in the US: the Lightwave products here seem to be significantly less expensive than the Rycote.
The application is mostly action shots, snowboarding and some skateboarding, mainly shot on a tripod.
Here is where I need advice: between the three following setups, which one would give me the best protection and versatility:
- Rycote Softie (140 euro)
- Lightwave Equalizer (90 euro)
- Lightwave Miniscreen (90 euro) + MiniSock (37 euro)
I admit to be tempted to the Miniscreen/MiniSock combo as it seems to be the closest to the concept of a front-end-only zeppelin (not expecting anything as good as result, though) and I can always add the MiniWindmaster fur cover later. Any comments from users would be most welcome, especially if you have compared hands-on these systems.
Also, I have read comments in other threads leading me to further ask if the "support disc system" of the Lightwave products works well?
Thank you,
---
Fred
The application is mostly action shots, snowboarding and some skateboarding, mainly shot on a tripod.
Here is where I need advice: between the three following setups, which one would give me the best protection and versatility:
- Rycote Softie (140 euro)
- Lightwave Equalizer (90 euro)
- Lightwave Miniscreen (90 euro) + MiniSock (37 euro)
I admit to be tempted to the Miniscreen/MiniSock combo as it seems to be the closest to the concept of a front-end-only zeppelin (not expecting anything as good as result, though) and I can always add the MiniWindmaster fur cover later. Any comments from users would be most welcome, especially if you have compared hands-on these systems.
Also, I have read comments in other threads leading me to further ask if the "support disc system" of the Lightwave products works well?
Thank you,
---
Fred