Date: 2008-12-02 06:38 pm (UTC)
Definitely... and getting worse now that computers are involved. :) I, conversely, am always just barely exposed to what's out there in the computing world; i traditionally live a good 5+ years behind the state of the art in that regard, so things like these USB mics are news to me.

Re your sound card: unless you have documented reason to believe that your sound card's A/D is absolutely atrocious, i'd be inclined to believe that the limiting factor is your microphone, and/or perhaps the settings you're using to record. Granted, as above, i'm kind of out of the loop these days, but i have yet to see a computer soundcard that can't record decent CD-resolution (16-bit, 44kHz, stereo) audio when levels are set correctly, especially for voiceover purposes. That aside, you said you've done some research, so maybe your findings say otherwise, but it's counter-intuitive to me. It would especially seem surprising that a manufacturer would put a better quality ADC into a complete microphone in your price range than the one that would be included in a standard soundcard. ...but again, i'm out of the loop; it may well be that sound card ADCs are complete crap as a general rule these days. *shrug*

What's most critical is that you've got your hardware (whatever it is) sampling properly -- that the audio levels going into the input jack are complete (i.e., don't plug a mono plug into a stereo jack), hot enough to give good strong levels to the A/D (peaks as close to max as possible are best) but not so hot as to clip (never touching the max). After that, you need a mic that can do a reasonable job of capturing your voice, and to make sure that nothing is clipping anywhere (not the mic being too close to the source, nor any upstream electronics being pushed past their limit).

As a note, it occurs to me that you could do a pretty good test of where your weak link is by plugging some other sources into your computer's input. If you have an iPod, walkman, stereo w/ headphone jack, etc. and a cheap cable and adapter or two, you can send a clean, properly-leveled audio signal into your system and see what you get. Sending a nice line level into your system, checking the meters/levels, and recording something might be a great way to get familiar with the setup, as well as find out if your sound card is really the problem. If you can set the levels right and get great audio, you'll know it's your mic.


Sorry if any or all of this is redundant with what you've already figured out. As i re-read your post i notice that you were really just looking for a decent USB mic. I just wanted to see if i could help and, admittedly, i always get caught up in talking audio. :)
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