and you are a MAN of the DEtail! You can exactly show and describe why you do this on the way you have done! That is what the world or whirld needs to be, not a entitled professor, just a MAN who can go into the details! Great!
great video, gonna buy the materials tonight. Just curious; that 1st one that appears in your video that's black. Did you purchase that somewhere or build that too?
Dry wall screws will work if u know what your doing get Long dry wall screws and find the stud it will work but don't predrill if you use dry wall screws I do it all the time never falls I mounted subs to a wall with dry wall screws
Great idea but, What and where did you get the bracket and swing arm that you have on the wall in your studio that's in the beginning of this video? Thanks for the idea. I will use it in other places.
I know its a bit late, but just wanted to put a heads up, the shelf bracket you used is not for use in tension, it's meant to be used in compression, ala you have it mounted on the wall upside down otherwise, great build will be building this soon
I seen the video, will try it but, that's not the one in your studio on the video, there is a u shaped metal bracket with a metal swing arm, That's what I was asking about.
Lalchhandama Patea You could absolutely use a cushion but it will definitely absorb a different range of frequencies. The type of material will absolutely changes how much it absorbs and at what frequency. it’s much more difficult to predict
BrownieLove Mike hi, yes I do. At this rate I can’t keep up with the amount of beats I sell and therefore never have any additional to post on my SoundCloud page. At some point I will catch up and will be able to re-upload new beats but at this point I’m more just making them custom for the artist at the same price
LAYTON BEREAL I made the first one but I used a bracket I got about 10 years ago which was customized when I got it. Then I customized the bracket again for this mic stand which you can’t buy anywhere (I checked). So I came up with a way that you could recreate it
Church Boy Media In the very beginning of the video I mention that this is a way to re-create it. That is a totally custom metal mount that needs metal working tools and a welder. Since almost no one has those tools these days, this was a workaround
TrueSoundStudios after I posted I actually kept reading comments and saw you answered a number of times :). Appreciate your quick response and the details you put into your videos. I’m a few year late discovering your vids but great work. A partner and I are building a Studio & podcast studio. Some of these are very helpful.
This is pretty awesome. I think trying to find a way to make the metal bracket fold to the side would make it even better at space saving. Or if you made the holes on the bracket keyholed so it could be taken off the wall entirely really easily.
Waste of space. Fix the timber to the entire length of the bracket. Fit hinges to the bracket then fix that to the wall. Folds up much tighter space. Your welcome 😛
I think it depends on how much horizontal length room you want out of your microphone, e.g. keeping it at far away from the wall for reflection purposes. Once you start incorporating bracket hindges you'll run into structural issues, metal bending, and improper weight distribution. Great concept but Not the smartest idea unless its welded and engineered for that purpose.
Mr. EDP I’ve been using this setup for a few years now and let me tell you I get NO unwanted noise from this mount. The mic is still in a shock mount??? Which is the same effect it would have if the mic were on the floor?? So what “unwanted noise” do you think you would get from this?
Tbh I'm a bit disappointed because I wanted to see how you made the nice clean version of it in your studio not a cheaper version made of a bracket and wood. I get that you're trying to show us a "way" to do it but for those of us that want the mount on the wall the way you have yours this doesn't really help. At 1:06 you said you were sharing your version of this. This is not your version of this. When we all commented on your Instagram to Show us how you made it we wanted to know how you made your version of this not another variation of it. Anyways I very much appreciated your hard work and you get a thumbs up of course.
i think he used a Television/monitor wall arm and modified it to work with his mic set up , i have a pretty heavy mic so i'm considering using an industrial dock arm and applying the principals i learned from this and various other wall mounted boom arm videos , theirs a fair amount of tutorials for them in photography/ lighting when you search.
No Filler Words Well I’m sorry you feel that way, but this is exactly how mine is. The metal bracket that I used, (though slightly different) I got about 10 years ago, and it was modified for a totally different project, then I modified it again to use it for those mic stand. The wood arm (as mentioned in the video) was what I used which was a 1 x 2 which I stated but for the video sake and re-creating it, I showed a different piece of wood to make it easier for someone else to build. So the design is EXACTLY the same, but because you cannot purchase the bracket that I had, I used a different bracket that is actually available. Probably the biggest difference is the fact that I didn’t paint the bracket and piece of wood on this mic stand re-creation.
You are a HUMAN!
Helping by finding new ways or ideas, for changing the WEALTH and WORTH, into your own!
Thanks for that in many ways!
and you are a MAN of the DEtail! You can exactly show and describe why you do this on the way you have done!
That is what the world or whirld needs to be, not a entitled professor, just a MAN who can go into the details!
Great!
Thank you thank you, i appreciate you saying that!
thank you! I am going to do a modified version of this that is fixed and doesn't articulate... your video was very inspirational!
excellent!! I made a vocal booth out of heavy foamular form home depot.. works great.. thanks for the great video!! JD
Gotta say man, that's really clever, probably cheaper than buying a proper Rode boom arm! Will give it a go when my new studio is complete.
Great idea/video. Thanks for posting
Absolutely and thanks for watching!
So simple and efficient! Wish I thought of it first
great video, gonna buy the materials tonight. Just curious; that 1st one that appears in your video that's black. Did you purchase that somewhere or build that too?
Dry wall screws will work if u know what your doing get Long dry wall screws and find the stud it will work but don't predrill if you use dry wall screws I do it all the time never falls I mounted subs to a wall with dry wall screws
Nice Project . Love It.
C-Jota Quintana thank you!!!
VERY cool and innovative!! Thank you so much for sharing this:)
Great idea but, What and where did you get the bracket and swing arm that you have on the wall in your studio that's in the beginning of this video? Thanks for the idea. I will use it in other places.
You are a Genius
Haha thank you
Great idea!
Thank you thank you!
Thanks for the idea! This was the solution I was looking for for my microphone. Thanks - KD4SIR
I know its a bit late, but just wanted to put a heads up, the shelf bracket you used is not for use in tension, it's meant to be used in compression, ala you have it mounted on the wall upside down
otherwise, great build will be building this soon
Once again Weezna, great job as ALWAYS. Very detailed. We love it Man.As ALWAYS we at MIRROR EMAGE ENTERTAINMENT wish you NOTHING but Success!!
Mirror Emage Entertainment thank you 🙏🏻
I got a 20 x 13 heavy duty bracket at home depot , well that work ?
God loves you guys!
Have anyone else here tried this yet?
I seen the video, will try it but, that's not the one in your studio on the video, there is a u shaped metal bracket with a metal swing arm, That's what I was asking about.
I have a question in your other videos, about panel. I ask your again, that if I dont have a glasswool can i use coushion for panel.
Lalchhandama Patea You could absolutely use a cushion but it will definitely absorb a different range of frequencies. The type of material will absolutely changes how much it absorbs and at what frequency. it’s much more difficult to predict
@@TrueSoundTV Ok, thanks for answer my question..
Hi. The beats on your sound cloud are 3+ years old. Do you still make beats?
BrownieLove Mike hi, yes I do. At this rate I can’t keep up with the amount of beats I sell and therefore never have any additional to post on my SoundCloud page. At some point I will catch up and will be able to re-upload new beats but at this point I’m more just making them custom for the artist at the same price
Which one are you using ? The one that’s not diy?
LAYTON BEREAL I made the first one but I used a bracket I got about 10 years ago which was customized when I got it. Then I customized the bracket again for this mic stand which you can’t buy anywhere (I checked). So I came up with a way that you could recreate it
Oof mine just snapped. I wonder if it would make a difference if I turn the bracket upward.
What did you use for the base or did you use the book shelve base?
The example video at the beginning is different from what was actually built. Did I miss something? I want the one in the example video.
Church Boy Media In the very beginning of the video I mention that this is a way to re-create it. That is a totally custom metal mount that needs metal working tools and a welder. Since almost no one has those tools these days, this was a workaround
TrueSoundStudios after I posted I actually kept reading comments and saw you answered a number of times :). Appreciate your quick response and the details you put into your videos. I’m a few year late discovering your vids but great work. A partner and I are building a Studio & podcast studio. Some of these are very helpful.
@@churchboymedia8030 what did you come up with?
@@TrueSoundTVOk got it
How do I install that mic Stan I need one in the wall
😍
So I know this isn’t about the video but where is your studio located?
Johanfry Lopez I’m in New York!
do you sell these?
Where did you buy yours
I built it from scratch!
This is pretty awesome. I think trying to find a way to make the metal bracket fold to the side would make it even better at space saving. Or if you made the holes on the bracket keyholed so it could be taken off the wall entirely really easily.
Yeah i had tried a few other designs but they created other issues. If you do find another way, let me know!
Waste of space. Fix the timber to the entire length of the bracket. Fit hinges to the bracket then fix that to the wall. Folds up much tighter space. Your welcome 😛
I think it depends on how much horizontal length room you want out of your microphone, e.g. keeping it at far away from the wall for reflection purposes. Once you start incorporating bracket hindges you'll run into structural issues, metal bending, and improper weight distribution. Great concept but Not the smartest idea unless its welded and engineered for that purpose.
You're gonna have all kinds of unwanted noise coming through any mic you attach to that. Good Luck!!!
Mr. EDP I’ve been using this setup for a few years now and let me tell you I get NO unwanted noise from this mount. The mic is still in a shock mount??? Which is the same effect it would have if the mic were on the floor?? So what “unwanted noise” do you think you would get from this?
Tbh I'm a bit disappointed because I wanted to see how you made the nice clean version of it in your studio not a cheaper version made of a bracket and wood. I get that you're trying to show us a "way" to do it but for those of us that want the mount on the wall the way you have yours this doesn't really help.
At 1:06 you said you were sharing your version of this. This is not your version of this. When we all commented on your Instagram to Show us how you made it we wanted to know how you made your version of this not another variation of it. Anyways I very much appreciated your hard work and you get a thumbs up of course.
i think he used a Television/monitor wall arm and modified it to work with his mic set up , i have a pretty heavy mic so i'm considering using an industrial dock arm and applying the principals i learned from this and various other wall mounted boom arm videos , theirs a fair amount of tutorials for them in photography/ lighting when you search.
No Filler Words Well I’m sorry you feel that way, but this is exactly how mine is. The metal bracket that I used, (though slightly different) I got about 10 years ago, and it was modified for a totally different project, then I modified it again to use it for those mic stand. The wood arm (as mentioned in the video) was what I used which was a 1 x 2 which I stated but for the video sake and re-creating it, I showed a different piece of wood to make it easier for someone else to build. So the design is EXACTLY the same, but because you cannot purchase the bracket that I had, I used a different bracket that is actually available. Probably the biggest difference is the fact that I didn’t paint the bracket and piece of wood on this mic stand re-creation.
Mic mount on walls ? Bad idea , Why ?? Low frequency car sounds will catch in it, if a car passes by.
Crap
Maturity!