if you already are using the rode wireless go 2 as a mic you can hook it up to an ipad the same way you connect it to your iphone. i would recommend the usb cable (extra to buy on rode’s website) for the best audio and control of the mics through the rode app.
@@Riversidefm Yep it works like a charm. and the audio is passed back and forth from the laptop to the headphone monitor (has its own gain control for everything from the USB) and vice versa.
We wouldn't advise that, and most likely would not work. If the XLR mic is a condenser is needs phantom power, which a USB connection won't provide. And if it's a dynamic mic, it would require significant gain power from an audio interface that the computer can't provide either.
Awesome and informative as always. Thanks Stephen!
Glad you liked it!
Really great info here...many thanks 👍🏻
Glad it was helpful!
if you already are using the rode wireless go 2 as a mic you can hook it up to an ipad the same way you connect it to your iphone. i would recommend the usb cable (extra to buy on rode’s website) for the best audio and control of the mics through the rode app.
If that works, definitely connect directly via USB-C. We haven't tested that connection specifically yet, but will soon!
@@Riversidefm Yep it works like a charm. and the audio is passed back and forth from the laptop to the headphone monitor (has its own gain control for everything from the USB) and vice versa.
Rather than an interface for your XLR mic, could you use an XLR - USB C cable in a pinch to run into your computer directly?
We wouldn't advise that, and most likely would not work. If the XLR mic is a condenser is needs phantom power, which a USB connection won't provide. And if it's a dynamic mic, it would require significant gain power from an audio interface that the computer can't provide either.