My attempts to reply last night, using my phone, didn't work. I'll try
again.
Take a look at Twirling's 'Accessory Pack'. It includes a stand, cable for
connecting to a PC, various USB adaptors and a case for the Twirling720 Lite
mic, and optionally a wind shield. I don't know how good any of these are, but
they're cheap enough that I ordered a pack yesterday.
Gerard
On 09/03/2018 00:27, Marc Lavallée wrote:
Hi Steven, and thanks for the useful info.
The fact that the Twirling720 presents itself as a stereo 96Khz
device and the possibility that the 4 channels are "encoded" in 2
channels is very interesting, because it could potentially be used with
any computer. I still don't use mine because the Android app is asking
for too many permissions on my phone. I'm waiting for the official SDK,
hoping I can program simple and safe custom apps. I also plan to build
a mount because holding it only from its USB plug is very risky; a
modified phone shell could be a good start.
Le Thu, 8 Mar 2018 18:40:20 +0000
Steven Boardman <boardroomout...@gmail.com> a écrit:
I have one too. Been using it successfully for a while with my android
phone.
It does seem to present itself to other audio apps as 2 channel 96khz
device.
When using the apk it records either stereo, or 4 channel A and B
format at 48khz. I think theres some sort if matrixing going on.
I haven't done any vertical tests, but the horizontal works well for
the price.
It is also pretty easy to rotate the capsule spindle, so not sure how
accurate the positioning is. Mine is also not quite perpendicular!
The manual is useless.
They are quick to fix bugs, and implement suggestions thoigh. (the
A-Fornat one was mine.)
Its way better than a h2n in my opinion, and really easy to carry, as
i always have my phone anyway.
Because if this i use it a lot, as i carry it at all times.
I just have to make a mount for use with my Samsung gear 360.
Best
Steve
On 8 Mar 2018 16:05, "John Leonard Main" <j...@johnleonard.uk> wrote:
Mine (pre-ordered for some small amount) arrived a couple of days
ago and I’ve got it hooked up to my MacBook via a suitable USB
adapter and an old Apple keyboard extension cable. At first, I
couldn't get a sensible signal out of it, but then discovered that
it needs to be connected via USB3, or it won’t work. Then I took a
look at the capsule orientation, which, although it is indeed a
tetrahedral array, seems to be skewed by 45º off centre, but as the
output is encoded in some way into two channels, this may not be a
problem. By using their 720 Studio app, I can get a sort-of
surround signal out of it, although it appears to have no vertical
information. The skimpy on-line manual is pretty useless for Mac
users, so I wonder in anyone else has had better or more consistent
results?
Bruce - I could send it to you for chamber analysis, if you’re
interested.
All the best,
John
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