This has been my favorite one of these I’ve seen so far. A lot of the kits shown are way beyond what I’m doing and though I’m not sporting some of the pricier tech in this vid, the technique and thought process connects with me.
At 2:15 he reveals he had to modify the PSC Eurocart to prevent it from “falling over into a mud puddle” by repositioning the wheels and axle because “it was back heavy”.
thanks a lot again Ursa! Very interesting and useful as usual :) what is "very important" at 13:47? I don't catch the name of it. Also no shotgun mics (?) :O xx
Is that PSC PowerStar Euro LiFE quick releasable? it is almost $2000 for just 256 watt hours. V mount batteries are about $1 per watt hour. Is there no easy way to string some vmount batteries together and add the juice gages and distribute box or other bells and whistles for a lot less?
I have mixed feelings about this.... Audio Engineers take years to build stuff like this hours and hours of good days bad days...then in this type of show within 18 minutes other techs get to see the rig...Now every new person coming into the industry might get the same gear but it takes more than just copying someone's build...just my opinion. You can load someone else's scene or EQ but you'll never get the same results. It takes time to build a career and clients.
The "What's In Your Kit" series is incredibly inspiring and I enjoy each episode :)
Thank you Star
This has been my favorite one of these I’ve seen so far. A lot of the kits shown are way beyond what I’m doing and though I’m not sporting some of the pricier tech in this vid, the technique and thought process connects with me.
I am not at all surprised he had to relocate the rear wheels further back. Love the slate. 1 minute in and I already like this guy
Thanks to Tom Curley and Kim Kylland for yet another great video! Somehow we missed this one in March when it came out. Great stuff!
Wait that was 18min long, that must have been the fast kind of minute, great content 👌🏻
Haha, my thoughts exactly. felt more like 10.
Thank you Ursa!
Thank ursa ! Looking on learning more about sound mixing
That was fantastic
Sounds great
At 2:15 he reveals he had to modify the PSC Eurocart to prevent it from “falling over into a mud puddle” by repositioning the wheels and axle because “it was back heavy”.
thanks a lot again Ursa! Very interesting and useful as usual :)
what is "very important" at 13:47? I don't catch the name of it.
Also no shotgun mics (?) :O
xx
Altoids
So as primarily a bag mixer. Been thinking of getting into cart mixing. How do you feed your monitors on a show like Yellowstone?
Is that PSC PowerStar Euro LiFE quick releasable? it is almost $2000 for just 256 watt hours. V mount batteries are about $1 per watt hour. Is there no easy way to string some vmount batteries together and add the juice gages and distribute box or other bells and whistles for a lot less?
legit
I have mixed feelings about this.... Audio Engineers take years to build stuff like this hours and hours of good days bad days...then in this type of show within 18 minutes other techs get to see the rig...Now every new person coming into the industry might get the same gear but it takes more than just copying someone's build...just my opinion. You can load someone else's scene or EQ but you'll never get the same results. It takes time to build a career and clients.
don’t use the term “Industry Standard” unless you DON’T want somebody else to be able to successfully introduce a better, competing product.
YOu need to hire another cameraman, cant even pull focus properly.