B
Bennyp
New member
Hello Friends,
Thank you for considering my question.
I record lectures on a regular basis. My dream is to have a system which produces clean audio files with two tracks: one of the lecturer at optimal volume levels, and another of the audience at legible levels.
The lecturer sits at a desk in front of a small library, about 6-7 meters square. About 11 students sit at desks opposite him, in 3 rows which fill the space.
I'm using a stereo-matched pair of "Samson CO2" mics (I know), screwed into a stereo bar and held up using a regular mic stand. The mics have a cardioid pattern. The Left channel mic is pointed up at a 45 degree angle towards the speaker. the Right channel mic is pointed 180 opposite, 45 degree angle down.
The lecturer comes out loud and clear, and sounding quite nice, compared to the average voice recorder. The audience, however comes out too quietly. I have experimented with using a higher input level for the right channel (audience) mic, but I didn't like the results, as I was getting too much reflection of the speaker, who often speaks louder than the audience.
So the trade off I have to make is between hearing the audience's questions and wrecking the lecturer's signal with reflections.
Any tips on mic type/placement or clever processing techniques to deaden the reflections and accentuate the questions?
Thanks again for reading,
BP
Thank you for considering my question.
I record lectures on a regular basis. My dream is to have a system which produces clean audio files with two tracks: one of the lecturer at optimal volume levels, and another of the audience at legible levels.
The lecturer sits at a desk in front of a small library, about 6-7 meters square. About 11 students sit at desks opposite him, in 3 rows which fill the space.
- Samson CO2 Mics on a stereo Bar
- Tascam DR-100
I'm using a stereo-matched pair of "Samson CO2" mics (I know), screwed into a stereo bar and held up using a regular mic stand. The mics have a cardioid pattern. The Left channel mic is pointed up at a 45 degree angle towards the speaker. the Right channel mic is pointed 180 opposite, 45 degree angle down.
The lecturer comes out loud and clear, and sounding quite nice, compared to the average voice recorder. The audience, however comes out too quietly. I have experimented with using a higher input level for the right channel (audience) mic, but I didn't like the results, as I was getting too much reflection of the speaker, who often speaks louder than the audience.
So the trade off I have to make is between hearing the audience's questions and wrecking the lecturer's signal with reflections.
Any tips on mic type/placement or clever processing techniques to deaden the reflections and accentuate the questions?
Thanks again for reading,
BP