CVD
03-31-2012, 11:47 AM
I'm cross-posting my thread from evomn because I know there's a lot of GoPro'ers on here that might benefit from this
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So after much screwing around I finally have a microphone setup I'm happy with. I'll save you all the play by play of the trial and error of using a mono mic and trying to set up dual mics. Suffice it to say it was a pain.
On to the good stuff, my materials:
GoPro HD Hero2 with skeleton housing, of course
2 mono mics with inline battery from Radio Shack (I've heard the GoPro mic input is powered, not powered and everything in between. At low volume my non-battery mics sounded fine but I never put them on the car because they suck)
A "Y" splitter with two female stereo inputs to one male stereo out
A mono in to stereo out converter plug ($2.60 at radio shack, yes you need this if you are running mono mics unless you want to fuck around with expensive editing software)
Foam bits torn off a mattress pad. I wrapped these around the mics to cut wind/road noise
Painters tape for securing the mics to the car
And for the results. I made 3 videos each with a different setup. SEE THE VIDEO DESCRIPTION TO SKIP ALL THE DRIVING AROUND. I didn't feel like editing them because they are just test videos so I put times in the description to skip to the WOT pulls etc.
First video is with one mic, this one is taped to the top of the airbox.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dMktU-U5i8k
Second video also one mic. This one is taped just above the exhaust. It distorts quite a bit, I think it was too close (~10 inches from the tip). Next time I'll move it up a bit.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0qFDv-vD4eY
Last video is my dual mic setup. I used the "Y" splitter to combine the audio from both mics. I was pretty pleased with how it turned out.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K5o2HYnQvng
Comments, suggestions and criticism all welcome. For me car videos are nothing without good audio. I hope this inspires others to go that extra mile with the GoPro, external mics are worth the trouble!
Feel free to tell me which audio setup you like best.
--------------------------
So after much screwing around I finally have a microphone setup I'm happy with. I'll save you all the play by play of the trial and error of using a mono mic and trying to set up dual mics. Suffice it to say it was a pain.
On to the good stuff, my materials:
GoPro HD Hero2 with skeleton housing, of course
2 mono mics with inline battery from Radio Shack (I've heard the GoPro mic input is powered, not powered and everything in between. At low volume my non-battery mics sounded fine but I never put them on the car because they suck)
A "Y" splitter with two female stereo inputs to one male stereo out
A mono in to stereo out converter plug ($2.60 at radio shack, yes you need this if you are running mono mics unless you want to fuck around with expensive editing software)
Foam bits torn off a mattress pad. I wrapped these around the mics to cut wind/road noise
Painters tape for securing the mics to the car
And for the results. I made 3 videos each with a different setup. SEE THE VIDEO DESCRIPTION TO SKIP ALL THE DRIVING AROUND. I didn't feel like editing them because they are just test videos so I put times in the description to skip to the WOT pulls etc.
First video is with one mic, this one is taped to the top of the airbox.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dMktU-U5i8k
Second video also one mic. This one is taped just above the exhaust. It distorts quite a bit, I think it was too close (~10 inches from the tip). Next time I'll move it up a bit.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0qFDv-vD4eY
Last video is my dual mic setup. I used the "Y" splitter to combine the audio from both mics. I was pretty pleased with how it turned out.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K5o2HYnQvng
Comments, suggestions and criticism all welcome. For me car videos are nothing without good audio. I hope this inspires others to go that extra mile with the GoPro, external mics are worth the trouble!
Feel free to tell me which audio setup you like best.