agree with most of your points and your voice to me sound in the tone department way different on the sm7b than on the pd-70 in which loses some of that existing lows as you mentioned.
Another broadcast dynamic microphone for your earballs. How does it compare to the SM7B and the Rode Podmic? Chapter Markers 00:00 Intro 01:02 What's in the box 01:32 Build quality and looks 02:40 Tech specs 03:53 Plosives 04:04 Off-axis rejection 04:48 Proximity Effect 05:17 Handling noise 05:38 Comparison w/Podmic 06:48 Comparison w/SM7b 08:16 Conclusion
I have a question about your thoughts on a deeper voice that naturally has a lower registry and this mic. The mic i have now is just too muddy at times and seems to lack real presence over all. Also I have a focusrite scarlet solo interface. How much gain do you think I'd have to give this puppy to get a good level?
This is definitely a good mic to try out in your case. I think the 40-45 dB range is typical amount of gain for this mic without any kind of mic booster. A little less if you're loud/close, a little more if you're quiet/further away
@@PhillipRPeck thanks for the feedback. Just one more question for clarity sake. When you say 40-45dB range, are you referring to the gain level in my DAW or the gain knob on my interface? And thanks again for your response
Comment for the algorithm. Helpful channel and videos dude, thanks!
Much appreciated!
For people that want to know. The tick windscreen from the shure sm7b fits perfectly on this mic in case you need one.
Good video.
Good tip, thank you
agree with most of your points and your voice to me sound in the tone department way different on the sm7b than on the pd-70 in which loses some of that existing lows as you mentioned.
thanks for video
you can do noise test like microwave fan hair dryer vacuum cleaner :)
Lol, I'll try some of those next time 😅
Thank you 😊
Another broadcast dynamic microphone for your earballs. How does it compare to the SM7B and the Rode Podmic?
Chapter Markers
00:00 Intro
01:02 What's in the box
01:32 Build quality and looks
02:40 Tech specs
03:53 Plosives
04:04 Off-axis rejection
04:48 Proximity Effect
05:17 Handling noise
05:38 Comparison w/Podmic
06:48 Comparison w/SM7b
08:16 Conclusion
Podmic sounds better to my ears… but i may be biased since i own one already 😅
Subscribed… thanks for great work and effort!
Thanks for the sub! I like the Podmic, too. I think it works for my voice pretty well
Not a pro by any means but I literally couldn’t tell the difference between the Pd70 and the SM7B with the presence boost enabled
That’s interesting. I think there’s a difference but I think in isolation, the PD70 is a great substitute for the much more expensive Shure
can you make a comparison between Rode PodMic and Sontronics Podcast Pro
I’m not familiar with that mic but I’ll check it out and see if I can get one
@@PhillipRPeck appreciated
I have a question about your thoughts on a deeper voice that naturally has a lower registry and this mic. The mic i have now is just too muddy at times and seems to lack real presence over all. Also I have a focusrite scarlet solo interface. How much gain do you think I'd have to give this puppy to get a good level?
This is definitely a good mic to try out in your case. I think the 40-45 dB range is typical amount of gain for this mic without any kind of mic booster. A little less if you're loud/close, a little more if you're quiet/further away
@@PhillipRPeck thanks for the feedback. Just one more question for clarity sake. When you say 40-45dB range, are you referring to the gain level in my DAW or the gain knob on my interface? And thanks again for your response
@@The_Infidel_of_Fragrance On the interface
@@PhillipRPeck so assuming the gain knob is a clock face...what time would 40-45dB be? 11 o'clock? 3:30?
I guess it depends how much total gain the device has. But I'd guess that 40-45 would be pretty close to the max, so maybe 2 to 3:30?