Bob Gundu
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I find the audio on Scarlet totally acceptable for my needs.
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I've measured the audio capabilities of the Scarlet with one of the best audio guys in Germany (he did sound for "The Life of Others", for example), who he's a complete high-end testing lab of his own.
We found that analog audio of Scarlet is coming quite close to the PIX 240 by Sound Devices. Nothing to complain about, really. And until phantom power is activated by firmware, we are using two excellent adapters constructed by the same guy and sold by Kortwich (Berlin), which adapt XLR to mini-plug (symmetrical) and add phantom power.
I have found anything other than 30dB gives very strange results.
Well, the audio is not precisely studio levels, it's more biased to microphone. The Scarlet doesn't really like anything above 775 mV.
If the limiter kicks in (which it does at pro line levels), you may get those effects. Rather add an attenuation if you are coming in from line equipment.
Arnold, shot a simple TVC on my own the other day. Had a wireless lapel going straight to channel 1, and a boom mic direct to channel 2 via Wooden Camera, no mixer at all.
Set and tested the level, monitored video and audio carefully during each take, went back to the studio and made a great spot, no fuss.
Took me a lot of trial and error to get a clean signal when I first got the Epic, but slowly learning to trust the results.
Still not as foolproof as the R1, but the hardware appears to be solid.
That's why I tested with an audio guy. I wouldn't trust him on image quality either ;-)