compasspnt wrote on Thu, 24 September 2009 15:21 |
I suspect that Keith meant that if he put one omni capsule on one half of an NT4 that he already owns, and used only that half, he would have an extra-option omni mic at only the cost of one capsule. |
Ian Visible wrote on Thu, 24 September 2009 22:16 |
I like Rode. |
KB_S1 wrote on Thu, 24 September 2009 15:45 | ||
Bingo. Although Now that I think of it a combination of one omni and one cardioid capsule could prove pretty handy for location sessions. |
craig boychuk wrote on Sun, 18 October 2009 21:40 |
One small drawback with the nt5 & nt4 is that they are not so good for use outdoors. They do not like the wind and the supplied windscreens don't help much. Not a deal breaker, though. Excellent for studio use, of course. -craig- |
Tomas Danko wrote on Fri, 25 September 2009 06:49 |
For the NT1000/2000 and such, chances are I'd eventually stop using them unless I ran out of other mics. |
benn wrote on Tue, 20 October 2009 08:50 | ||
I was involved in a session where we ended up choosing to use an NT1000 on a lead female vocal for a couple tracks over a very impressive mic selection at a well known studio here. Not saying that it would always be the case, but it has happened. For recordists on a tight budget, Rode mics are an extraordinary resource. For people on an unlimited budget, Rode mics are sometimes the best tool for the job. |
KB_S1 wrote on Mon, 19 October 2009 06:24 |
You need a 'Dead Kitten'. Unfortunate name but appropriate product. |