A couple of years ago I was at a radio station were they had super
flexible mic arms: you just grabbed the mic, moved it freely *any*
desired position and there it stayed as you let go of the mic.
Real easy, flexible and precise. Much better IMHO than the
conventional mic stands I see everywhere in studios or at concerts. I
find these rather clumsy for a difficult angle when recording
acoustical instruments. As a matter of fact, I find several things on
conventional mic stands & spins design not so clever. Also, some of
them sag.
My question: does anyone know how these "radio" mic arms are called,
do they exist as boom stands for in the studio and does anyone know a
spin that you can turn all directions (not just up and down)?
"Anseo" <anseo@wanadoo.nl> wrote in message
news:4f16a015.0503310952.12168964@posting.google.com...
>A couple of years ago I was at a radio station were they had super
> flexible mic arms: you just grabbed the mic, moved it freely *any*
> desired position and there it stayed as you let go of the mic.
>
> Real easy, flexible and precise. Much better IMHO than the
> conventional mic stands I see everywhere in studios or at concerts. I
> find these rather clumsy for a difficult angle when recording
> acoustical instruments. As a matter of fact, I find several things on
> conventional mic stands & spins design not so clever. Also, some of
> them sag.
>
>
> My question: does anyone know how these "radio" mic arms are called,
> do they exist as boom stands for in the studio and does anyone know a
> spin that you can turn all directions (not just up and down)?
>
> Thanks.
Anseo <anseo@wanadoo.nl> wrote:
>
>My question: does anyone know how these "radio" mic arms are called,
>do they exist as boom stands for in the studio and does anyone know a
>spin that you can turn all directions (not just up and down)?
They are called broadcast booms. There are a bunch of manufacturers.
in the US, you could call Broadcast Supply West or Harris-Allied Broadcast
Supply, each of which carry several lines.
--scott
--
"C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."
"Anseo" <anseo@wanadoo.nl> wrote in message
news:4f16a015.0503310952.12168964@posting.google.com...
>A couple of years ago I was at a radio station were they had super
> flexible mic arms: you just grabbed the mic, moved it freely *any*
> desired position and there it stayed as you let go of the mic.
>
> Real easy, flexible and precise. Much better IMHO than the
> conventional mic stands I see everywhere in studios or at concerts. I
> find these rather clumsy for a difficult angle when recording
> acoustical instruments. As a matter of fact, I find several things on
> conventional mic stands & spins design not so clever. Also, some of
> them sag.
>
>
> My question: does anyone know how these "radio" mic arms are called,
> do they exist as boom stands for in the studio and does anyone know a
> spin that you can turn all directions (not just up and down)?
>
> Thanks.
On 3/31/05 12:52 PM, in article
4f16a015.0503310952.12168964@posting.google.com, "Anseo" <anseo@wanadoo.nl>
wrote:
> A couple of years ago I was at a radio station were they had super
> flexible mic arms: you just grabbed the mic, moved it freely *any*
> desired position and there it stayed as you let go of the mic.
>
> Real easy, flexible and precise.
> My question: does anyone know how these "radio" mic arms are called,
> do they exist as boom stands for in the studio and does anyone know a
> spin that you can turn all directions (not just up and down)?
These are easily bought at broadcast supply houses.
They also REQUIRE (that word's important) to be mounted to an immovable
rock-solid base like a table, countertop or 2' square sheet of 1" armour
plate.
Mount them on a regular mic stand and say goodbye to whatever mic you put up
there as they go flying over sideways first time someone grabs and moves it.
A pound or so of mic and shockmount on the end of a 3' lever 4' off the
ground makes for Big Fun With Gravity.
Anseo wrote:
> A couple of years ago I was at a radio station were they had super
> flexible mic arms: you just grabbed the mic, moved it freely *any*
> desired position and there it stayed as you let go of the mic.
>
> Real easy, flexible and precise. Much better IMHO than the
> conventional mic stands I see everywhere in studios or at concerts. I
> find these rather clumsy for a difficult angle when recording
> acoustical instruments. As a matter of fact, I find several things on
> conventional mic stands & spins design not so clever. Also, some of
> them sag.
>
>
> My question: does anyone know how these "radio" mic arms are called,
> do they exist as boom stands for in the studio and does anyone know a
> spin that you can turn all directions (not just up and down)?
>
> Thanks.
On 3/31/05 12:52 PM, in article
4f16a015.0503310952.12168964@posting.google.com, "Anseo" <anseo@wanadoo.nl>
wrote:
> A couple of years ago I was at a radio station were they had super
> flexible mic arms: you just grabbed the mic, moved it freely *any*
> desired position and there it stayed as you let go of the mic.
You can make a mic holder using thick gauge copper wire.....I use mine for
navigating through the jungle of cymbal stands and resonating buckets that
is the drum set....this is great because you can custom make the "arm" to
suit your needs. Thicker wire for bigger mics/less movement, thinner for
smaller....long reach, short reach....to a attach a mic clip you can thread
the end of the copper and attach something that will hold a bolt that you
can screw a mic clip onto....or you can just do like I did and wrap the
copper around a bolt that will hold a mic clip, put a nut on the bolt to
clamp it strongly in place (threadlock makes it even stronger) and viola!
Attach the other end to a wall/ceiling/heavy object. I used a small bench
vise that is heavy enough to set on the floor, but can also clamp to cymbal
stands. If you want ultra heavy-duty for big LDC's and/or very little
movement, double up on the thick copper. Good luck!
"Anseo" <anseo@wanadoo.nl> wrote in message
news:4f16a015.0503310952.12168964@posting.google.com...
> A couple of years ago I was at a radio station were they had super
> flexible mic arms: you just grabbed the mic, moved it freely *any*
> desired position and there it stayed as you let go of the mic.
>
> Real easy, flexible and precise. Much better IMHO than the
> conventional mic stands I see everywhere in studios or at concerts. I
> find these rather clumsy for a difficult angle when recording
> acoustical instruments. As a matter of fact, I find several things on
> conventional mic stands & spins design not so clever. Also, some of
> them sag.
>
>
> My question: does anyone know how these "radio" mic arms are called,
> do they exist as boom stands for in the studio and does anyone know a
> spin that you can turn all directions (not just up and down)?
>
> Thanks.
Thanks everyone for taking the trouble to answer my question. I just
love this forum, it's one of the best places to get (or give) info.
So, I'm getting myself some flexible "radio" mic arms with heavy
stands and see if that works better. I suspect so. The DIY idea is
good, but if I can buy decent stuff I'll do just that. Because my life
is running out of time.
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