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Author Topic: Taping w/ CA-11's for first time tonight - Suggestions?  (Read 10915 times)

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Offline jj69

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Taping w/ CA-11's for first time tonight - Suggestions?
« on: September 16, 2011, 10:01:03 AM »
I'm going to try out my CA-11 cardioids for the first time tonight.  I'm running the CA-11's into a battery box with bass rolloff, then into an PCM-M10's line input.  The band is a Journey tribute band in a very large room.  This is not really a stealth situation, but the mics will have to be on my person.

I'm just a bit thrown off by the fixed clips on the CA-11's.  They can't be rotated like AT clips, so I'm not sure what is the best way to mount these.

I'd like to mount them to a shirt collar, but I think they'll move around a lot.  Any suggestions?

Offline darktrain

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Re: Taping w/ CA-11's for first time tonight - Suggestions?
« Reply #1 on: September 16, 2011, 11:53:49 AM »
I'm going to try out my CA-11 cardioids for the first time tonight.  I'm running the CA-11's into a battery box with bass rolloff, then into an PCM-M10's line input.  The band is a Journey tribute band in a very large room.  This is not really a stealth situation, but the mics will have to be on my person.

I'm just a bit thrown off by the fixed clips on the CA-11's.  They can't be rotated like AT clips, so I'm not sure what is the best way to mount these.

I'd like to mount them to a shirt collar, but I think they'll move around a lot.  Any suggestions?

Don't use roll off with cards(period).

dorrcoq

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Re: Taping w/ CA-11's for first time tonight - Suggestions?
« Reply #2 on: September 16, 2011, 03:37:54 PM »
Seems to me fixed clips would be more stable than rotating ones.  My fixed clips have never moved, I know that.

Offline jj69

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Re: Taping w/ CA-11's for first time tonight - Suggestions?
« Reply #3 on: September 16, 2011, 04:39:31 PM »
I was just concerned about positioning them when there's no flexibility in the clip. 

Perhaps it's better to clip them to a thick camera strap than my shirt collar? 

Offline tonebloke

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Re: Taping w/ CA-11's for first time tonight - Suggestions?
« Reply #4 on: September 17, 2011, 12:34:14 AM »
Seems to me fixed clips would be more stable than rotating ones.  My fixed clips have never moved, I know that.


I agree with dorrcoq. Most times I clip them to my leather jacket collar and I get no disruption to the audio (other than some 7 foot turd standing infront of me) being directed from the speakers, and, no-one can bump them.
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Offline jj69

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Re: Taping w/ CA-11's for first time tonight - Suggestions?
« Reply #5 on: September 18, 2011, 12:43:07 AM »
I got sort of mixed results from my first try with these mics.  Unfortunately, my seats were farther back from the PA than I'd hoped, and the volume from the PA was not as high as normal for a rock show.  The audience was relatively quiet, however, but to my ears, the recording sounds a bit distant. 

The first thing I noticed is that the treble seems a bit rolled off compared to my omnis.  Is this normal for the CA-11's? 

The second thing I noticed is that the mics seem very, very susceptible to being moved compared to my omnis.  Is one supposed to remain perfectly still when taping with cards?  I'm not talking about turning around 360 degrees, or jumping up and down, or anything extreme like that.  I usually bring a camera to shows, so I was obviously moving my arms when I was taking a few pics with the zoom lens on my small camera.  I was also a bit paranoid about how the mics were clipped to my shirt, so I probably fiddled with them a few times too many. 

The cards were very good at rejecting noise from the yappers around me, and I suppose that's one of the main benefits of them. 

adrianf74

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Re: Taping w/ CA-11's for first time tonight - Suggestions?
« Reply #6 on: September 18, 2011, 08:39:55 AM »
I can't speak for the 11's as I use the 14's but I can speak about pick-up patterns, motion, etc. 

If you were further back and the PA was less active than normal, be thankful you used the cards and not the omnis.  A quieter PA system, next to drunken/chatty wooks, is a taper's next-worst-nightmare. 

I find the fact that you're saying the treble seems rolled off... usually it's more-so the bass and that the mids are a little more "murky" if you will.   I know Chris checks his mics before he sends them out so I doubt the mics are the culprit.  Cards are very particular when it comes to where you're standing in the room.  Their pickup pattern is predominantly that  space that is in front of them and not-so-much the sides or behind you.  They also don't like being moved - if they are moved too much while you're doing other activities, you will likely hear this in your recording (less so over speakers but definitely with headphones).  Cards clipped to your shirt will be detrimental depending on where you've clipped them (you want those get those suckers as high as you can) as keeping them lower will also add to your muddy/murkyness.

Cards are good at cutting down the noise from idiots around you but they also have a different "sound" over omnis.  Learning placement and which mic to use only comes with time and practice.

Offline acidjack

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Re: Taping w/ CA-11's for first time tonight - Suggestions?
« Reply #7 on: September 18, 2011, 05:40:11 PM »
The culprit for the reduced treble is clipping mics too low. Unless you are 7 feet tall, the mics should be on your head, not a shirt collar. Even ultra premium mics will sound bad with bodies blocking in front of them. 
« Last Edit: September 19, 2011, 02:19:47 PM by acidjack »
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Offline newplanet7

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Re: Taping w/ CA-11's for first time tonight - Suggestions?
« Reply #8 on: September 18, 2011, 09:22:48 PM »
The culprit for the reduced treble is clipping mics too low. Unless you are 7th tall, the mics should be on your head, not a shirt collar. Even ultra premium mics will sound bad with bodies blocking in front of them.
This.
I have a many stealth recordings where the high end is lost from the mics being obstructed/too low.
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Offline Fried Chicken Boy

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Re: Taping w/ CA-11's for first time tonight - Suggestions?
« Reply #9 on: September 20, 2011, 01:38:43 PM »
The culprit for the reduced treble is clipping mics too low. Unless you are 7th tall, the mics should be on your head, not a shirt collar. Even ultra premium mics will sound bad with bodies blocking in front of them.
This.
I have a many stealth recordings where the high end is lost from the mics being obstructed/too low.

Totally agreed.  As an owner of CA-11's and having recorded with them quite a number of times, I can tell you the one thing they don't lack is treble.  Even if you're tall, wearing them at shirt collar height is too low, IMHO.

cashandkerouac

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Re: Taping w/ CA-11's for first time tonight - Suggestions?
« Reply #10 on: September 20, 2011, 02:41:15 PM »
The culprit for the reduced treble is clipping mics too low. Unless you are 7th tall, the mics should be on your head, not a shirt collar. Even ultra premium mics will sound bad with bodies blocking in front of them.
This.
I have a many stealth recordings where the high end is lost from the mics being obstructed/too low.

Totally agreed.  As an owner of CA-11's and having recorded with them quite a number of times, I can tell you the one thing they don't lack is treble.  Even if you're tall, wearing them at shirt collar height is too low, IMHO.

ditto.  if you wear the mics at head height you'll get better sound quality.  you'll also be able to take pictures without bumping into the mics.

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Re: Taping w/ CA-11's for first time tonight - Suggestions?
« Reply #11 on: September 20, 2011, 03:21:04 PM »
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Offline jj69

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Re: Taping w/ CA-11's for first time tonight - Suggestions?
« Reply #12 on: September 20, 2011, 04:08:14 PM »
I've been listening more to that recording, and I actually find the motion problem far more disturbing than the treble roll off. 

My thinking is that if I have mics mounted on my head (whether they're in a hat or croakies), there are going to be a lot more motion effects in the recording than if I have them mounted on my collar or shirt pocket. 

It's much easier to keep one's body facing forward through an entire set than one's head.  I can't see keeping my head perfectly still through an entire show. 

Offline acidjack

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Re: Taping w/ CA-11's for first time tonight - Suggestions?
« Reply #13 on: September 20, 2011, 04:10:34 PM »

It's much easier to keep one's body facing forward through an entire set than one's head.  I can't see keeping my head perfectly still through an entire show.

It gets easier with practice.  The "motion" you are probably hearing is phasing caused by people walking/moving in front of you.  I find you can move your head a little, as long as you don't make sudden motions.

I'm 6'4" and every once in awhile I've gotten away with mounting to a shirt collar or my shoulders, but even then, only with omnis, and even then, I'd have been better off going with a head mount. 
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Offline Church-Audio

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Re: Taping w/ CA-11's for first time tonight - Suggestions?
« Reply #14 on: September 21, 2011, 07:48:58 PM »
I've been listening more to that recording, and I actually find the motion problem far more disturbing than the treble roll off. 

My thinking is that if I have mics mounted on my head (whether they're in a hat or croakies), there are going to be a lot more motion effects in the recording than if I have them mounted on my collar or shirt pocket. 

It's much easier to keep one's body facing forward through an entire set than one's head.  I can't see keeping my head perfectly still through an entire show.

When the source is not loud you will always hear a shift when you move your head. But if you are close to the source you will not hear that as much. Actually mounting them on your head gives you less shift because the distance is not as great as your shirt collar. The shorter the distance between the mics the less "shift" You will hear but the more your stereo image will suffer. A solid boundary like your head makes for a better recording than mounting them on a collar. When you are far away from the source and you have a low volume source you will always have issues. As the sound pressure increases you will have a more solid image and less shift in that image when you move your head. One way to test this theory is simply to crank a single stereo speaker and move closer to the source and move the mics from side to side then move farther away from the source and listen to the difference. There will be a much more pronounced effect farther away. When you are closer to the sound or the sound is louder and thus more directional less reflected sound gets picked up and thus less localization of the perceived field is picked up.



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