Definitely high class, suggesting the Neumanns!
Maybe I'm being overly dramatic with our demands. Realize that as of now these projects are shot with a thousand dollar Canon Vixia, and a hundred dollar mini shotgun on the hotshoe. This alone is getting us like 80% to where we want to be. The biggest problem is that even with a wombat or dead cat on the mic we still get a lot of wind outside. Without the wind I can always boost gain. But with the wind, of course, audio is very difficult to work with.
The solution I was looking for is simply to get a better shotgun with a more complete wind blocker. That's why I was considering the NTG-2 or 3 with a Blimp. Surely the NTGs will pick up audio better than the $100 mini? Surely the blimp will block wind better? For outside filming we don't need the ambient noises, a hyper pattern is just fine.
It would be quite odd to drop $800 on a mic and another $300 on a blimp and have it record even worse than the hotshoe mini we use now and is just past acceptable! It would also be odd to suggest the only upgrade path from our $100 mic that would be acceptable is many thousands of dollars worth of wireless and Neumanns!
I was thinking this for an audio setup:
NTG-3
Rode Blimp with dead cat
Sennheiser EW 100 ENG G3 for the wireless system
Juicedlink CX231 XLR Adapter
And then an assortment of proper cables and such. Whatever else to compliment that. It would run us up over $2000 for the upgrades, and of course it's just a start.
Budget would probably not allow us to drop that 2K on the mic alone. Besides, that's just one mic, we still need the rest of the gear. And they want to upgrade video as well soon and that is even greater budget coming up soon.
I'd say 60% of filming has to be outdoors, indoor our audio is fine, outside is another beast altogether!
Thanks for your help. Youtube has been useful for people testing mics, but they tend to not test outdoors from longer ranges. I'm trying to avoid thousand dollar "tests" of mics and hope they work after buying them.
I appreciate advice, if I can't join AES I'm still looking for a place where more people might have experience with prosumer gear and DVD production and training. "Go buy multi-grand audio equipment" or "hire a production crew" is easy to say, but totally not realistic for our in-house projects. I'm afraid they've laid this at my feet to improve it!
I guess it comes down to amateur equipment, amateur results.
I would have thought that if you want to stay in business you would want to turn out a professional product.
If you intend to stay in business and invest in good equipment then it will last you a long time. I still have my Neumann SM 69 FET I bought in 1971. It is now worth on the second hand market, about double what I paid for it.
You have picked a good radio system. The mic is problematic as the mic is mono.
You really need to record in stereo. This helps give the voices their space and separate them from the background.
I suggested the Neumann, because it is a stereo microphone. Not only that, it is an M-S matrix microphone. This is a technique I really like, because it allows to set the width and depth of the sound stage. This is very important for audio to go with video.
I think unless you record in a hurricane, spotting the presenter with a levalier mic, mixed in subtly with the feed from the Neumann system on the mix panel would give very professional results. With it all backed up with professional editing software, you should be able to distinguish your product. After all, when you see TV personalities broadcast outside with this type of technique results are excellent with good voice clarity, and a sense of where they are.
Unfortunately in audio getting the 20% improvement you desire will take about a 20 fold increase in expenditure.
By your own admission your product is not of an adequate standard.
I'm reluctant to advise half measures as it more likely than not it will be money down the drain.
If you want to distinguish yourself from amateur productions, then it will require a serious investment and no half measures.
I leaned that years ago. Until I bought top notch equipment, I got nowhere, certainly not broadcast standard.
If you are going to promote yourself as a professional organization, selling a professional product, then I can't see half measures putting you where you need to be form a business standpoint.
When purchasing product, especially a University, there is every right to be the expectation of a professional product.
However I fear we may be descending to to ranks of the third world, and previous standards may be out the window. I hope not, and I must say threads like this really upset me.
If it was my class, I can be sure I would return the DVDs with the expectation of a full refund.