moresound: your right. countryman charges $50 more for the hardwired XLR connector, compared to the $20 extra for nearly anything else but bare. Going bare would save me $200 if I bought 4 of em. gah. Do I trust my wiring skills tho? Curious tho, if i bought a used Lav mic designed for a particular wireless transmitter, would changing the connector to a XLR by hand cause any problems for use with standard phantom power? I dont understand the transmitter compability listings of lav mics yet, outside of different plug types..
I found this article online that seems to indicate that doing both, boom and lav mics, as the best choice - but, Boom is the right choice for indoors nearly always. I know a couple of you already voiced a similar opinion in this thread - so thank you.
http://www.dvxuser.com/V6/showthread.php?t=79324
(despite that, podcast shows like geekbrief tv use a lav mic - the countryman B6 for example [$430] -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xm2bcmlvGv4 ,sounds *okay*, sometimes.)
After looking around at lav mics, I don't think I can afford any of the decent ones - $500 per lav mic x 4 = pain. I might buy a couple cheap AT35s lavs for fun tho, just in case I need them, but it seems Boom is the most liked choice. I wish I could still afford to do both boom and lav...
anyways, XLR is my choice for the connector type, I believe. USB is out of the question as USB cables don't like being very long and lack versatility; while 3.5mm would cause too much noise. I still am considering some type of high-end field recorder as a boom mic though, which wouldnt then need a connector (probably a bad idea).
Booming introduces some problems/questions though,
-Would I need more than one Boom mic to cover 4 people at the table?
-If I decided to hang multiple mics from the ceiling, how likely will I be faced with unresolvable phase issues? I'm not sure I can abide by the 3:1 rule...
-If someone stands up, speaks louder than others, or speaks off-axis, how likely will I run into audio problems with a hanging boom mic? Are there any mic choices that would best be suited to counter those problems if they arise?
You have already provided me with some great suggestions for room/boom mics, such as the AT4050. Would a mic like the classic Electrovoice RE20 be at all useful to me? I'm going to need to make a purchase soon, so I'm just looking for last minute advice here. I'm pretty sure Im going to go with a boom mic, and only then buy good lav mics if I run into problems....
thanks..
