1
I just got a new Snowflake USB Microphone and my recordings are way too quiet in Windows 7. I was previously using a Logitech headset, which recorded fine.
I have the Snowflake on my monitor, and I do my best to face it and project without yelling, but I still need to manually increase the volume. I have gone into the properties for the recording device and cranked the volume all the way to 100%. There is no boost like I have seen on built in microphones.
I have recorded with a couple different software programs and they both record very quietly. If I hold the microphone right up to my mouth then it records better, but that is not very practical, and the microphone isn't comfortable for holding that way.
Any suggestions?
2...What? First of all, condenser mics don't have bias current (well, they do, but it's micro or nanoamps, e.g. 0.0000001 amps). Second, mic sensitivity is COMPLETELY unrelated to mic supply current, and anyways, a mic element that draws 10 mA is massively power hungry (USB provides 500 mA). Third, USB uses digital signaling, so the "Signal strength" on the USB connection is unrelated to the sould level, and also, USB IS shielded (but that's to prevent interference from getting out, mostly).
Buying a Mic at a computer store is a bad idea, but all the reasons above are wrong. – Fake Name – 2010-06-25T02:47:55.517
1You are correct about the RF interference on the USB line, sorry, brain misfired and post corrected. – msw – 2010-06-25T03:05:46.183
He's correct about mic sensitivity having nothing to do with supply current as well. – endolith – 2010-07-11T22:14:13.267