Rycote now make these - not cheap, but incredibly effective: I now have a pair
of ex-theatre DPA4061s taped to the outside of a window of our flat as we get
visited quite often by a wonderfully vocal blackbird who sits on the railing
and marks out his territory by singing lustily to the surround
Bill de Garis wrote:
> I've had a couple of Len's DPA4060's since 2000.
> They are first class mics.
Two more options:
The various Soundman OKM models...
http://soundman.de/en/intro_en.html
and the Ohrwurm (ear worm) mics made by a guy in Norther Germany...
http://www.ohrwurmaudio.de/paypal.
I've had a couple of Len's DPA4060's since 2000.
They are first class mics.
Used them attached to my glasses just above my ears and they gave the most startling
realism when played back on my Senny HD25 cans.
I've had people jump and turn quickly when listening to recordings of motorbikes going
Chris Pike wrote:
There are various options around for binaural recording. When considering
recordings on real heads (for individualised HRTF sets) what microphones
do you recommend? Clearly there going to be a large range in price and
quality. B&K 4101 for example may be out of my price rang
Hi all,
There are various options around for binaural recording. When considering
recordings on real heads (for individualised HRTF sets) what microphones do you
recommend? Clearly there going to be a large range in price and quality. B&K
4101 for example may be out of my price range.
On a relat