MrZekeMan said:
I'll have to respectfully disagree with you on this mixmkr. I don't believe shock mounts to be an "advertising gimmick". I think they are beneficial.
If anything, they are even more beneficial for the home recordist. Because we generally don't have the floating floors and acoustic treatments that the big boys have.
If the big studio's having all these treatments still find it beneficial to apply shock mount dampening, how much more so will it help us.
Zeke
sure they are an advertising gimmick...and you're kidding yourself if you think not. And I certainly understand MOST people do not have decoupled surfaces in their home studio....BUT, most people have air cond noise, refrigerator noise, CPU noise, barking dogs, TV sound, kids playing, monitor leakage, poor tracking isolation, and the list goes on....not to mention lousy mics and just plain inexperience with what they are doing. These noises GENERALLY (and I would bet in Bucky62's situation...in which I was replying to) are far worse than some industrial cement mixing facility 1/4 mile away, and somehow getting on to "home based" recordings. I can understand striving for the best, and YES, a shockmount, even if it is the cheezy $25 Marshall mount on their cheezy $150 mic, will help....BUT these other factors I listed are FAR more dominant in MOST (re-just about all) home situations. It is like the guy who buys his albums (the vinyl ones) and puts them on casette to *preserve* the quality, (or the guy who records at 16 bit and mixes to a 24 bit medium)...ha!!). Fix the big problems first, then proceed to the smaller issues.... In other words, don't spend 90% of your budget on acoustical treatments, to only have it "flawed" by a crappy $30 hollow core door with a 1/2" gap under it for your control room door. Also, I am not dismissing the fact that unwanted transmitted sounds can add up over 20 or more tracks either. But I have seen, and participated in many large budget recording sessions at large budget studios, and the fact that the window was open in the tracking room, never presented a problem on MOST of the recorded tracks....
And.....I bet 50% of the people that buy the MXL2001 and its shockmount buy it because of its cost AND looks. Like I mentioned...a little "wow" factor can go a long way. (not to mention some succesful marketing)....and for an extra 25 bucks...why not (sure it can help, I agree, but that's not the reason Marshall is offering it on their budget mic)
By the way....have you had trouble with street rumble when mic'ing your 9' Bosendorfer, during the quiet passages, to only say: "damn...we'll have to retrack it...to much background cement mixing plant noise transmitting thru the mic stand." ?? Ah...don't worry...my Tascam casette 8 tracker will cover it up with the intenal machine noise!!! ha!!