also you may wish to change patterns, or if recording in stereo, from the microphone, the best solution is isolation from the hum source, and I do mean vibration, since the Yetti seems to be prone to it. I truly do love mine! One other thing is to record at a lower volume level and see if that cuts down on acoustic hum as well, or use a 120Hz filter in your audio software. I made one in Sound Forge, copying the data from the 60Hz one and changing the frequencies to 120Hz. I did that for 50Hz also for European and Canadian recordings which have hum.
-- Curtis Delzer. HS. K 6 V F O San Bernardino, CA. curtis1...@verizon.net skype: curtis1014 On Fri, 14 Feb 2014 07:28:33 +0000 "Ray" <rays-h...@raynetbrm.plus.com> wrote: > You're getting some good tips on this and I found the link to Mic technique > good. > > Whatever mic you are using you will get this problem if its sitting directly > above > the computer. I've moved my Rode mic over to another purch to the side of the > desk, and though its not very convenient it cuts down the hum and vibration > quite a > bit. > > I speak pretty close to the mic without encouraging pops. Sometimes I use a > bit of > base roll-off in the audio editor. > > One more thing which can help is a mic shock mount, which should isolate the > mic > from stand-borne noise. > > Hope some of that helps. > > Ray. >