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Tim Abell
Tim Abell

Posted on • Originally published at timwise.co.uk on

Podcasting hardware setup

Because you asked.

Current recording/playback setup

  • Samson Q2U cardiod XLR/USB Microphone ~ £90
    • USB means no need for a mixer or XLR adapter thing.
    • Seems to be the best price/quality balance for me.
    • The cardiod effect is pretty good, greatly reducing input of noises from elsewhere, especially if you talk really close to it (which I don’t).
  • Proel RSM180 Microphone stand with boom ~ £34
    • Because standing desk, plus the Samson mic doesn’t isolate vibrations from the desk if it’s on a desk mount.
  • AKORD Microphone Swivel Pop Filter ~ £5
    • Because all the cool kids have one, and it was cheap. No idea if I really need it.
  • Some old philips bluetooth headphones connected with a real headphone cable to the line out on the back of the Samson mic. I only use this for recording to avoid feedback from speakers. It has a feedback of your own voice which is disconcerting and nice in equal measure. For conference calls zoom and teams seem to do a decent job of cutting out the feedback, and I use mute a lot anyway so I don’t bother with the headphones.
  • The tiny and highly capable Nobsound G3 2 Channel Bluetooth 5.0 Power Amplifier 100W hifi amp, driving a pair of bookshelf Kefs for editing, music and conference calls.

Also-ran

I started with a Jabra Evolve 65 wireless headset (~£130 because covid prices) but that heavily processes voice so while it’s great for conference calls it’s not good for anything beyond your third episode as people will unsubscribe just for the sound quality. Still use them for on the go conference calls and phone calls, and occasionally music (though my phone’s bluetooth is currently borked).

I tried a Blue Microphones Snowball USB Microphone (~£75) next, but that picks up everything even in it’s alleged cardioid mode.

Some of my friends who take it more seriously splashed out on a Shure SM7B XLR Mic at a mere £389, and you have to by an XLR mixer to run it. I have to say they sound lurvely, and when they knock it you hardly hear it so it’s got excellent vibration isolation built in.

Webcam

I also have the Logitech C920 HD Pro Webcam (now at ~£105 because of covid lockdown demand for webcams) which I have running to chat to co-hosts, but don’t bother recording or uploading anywhere.

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