Woot! has
DJI Mic Wireless Lavalier Microphone (2 TX + 1 RX + Charging Case) on sale for
$199.
Shipping is free for Amazon Prime Members (must login with your Amazon account and select a shipping address in order for Woot to apply free shipping) or is otherwise $6 per order.
Thanks to Community Member
TenseWinter4345 for finding this deal.
Features:
- An all-in-one design makes it ultra-portable and accessible. Two transmitters and the receiver are pre-linked, charged, and securely stored in the charging case.
- With a max transmission range of 250 meters (820 feet) in open, unobstructed environments, DJI Mic is ideal for scenarios like livestreaming, vlogging, and outdoor recording.
- Enjoy 5.5 hours of battery life from the transmitters, 5 hours from the receiver, and up to 15 hours with the charging case.
- Discreet, hideable, and suitable for coordinated recording, easily attach DJI Mic to clothing or other objects for flexible and convenient use in any environment.
- The receiver has a built-in 0.95-inch OLED touchscreen for intuitive control of transmitter options along with access to brightness, volume, or battery level information.
- 8GB of internal storage can handle up to 14 hours of 48kHz 24-bit audio without compression. It can record separately and output audio files quickly to a computer using a data cable.
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11 Comments
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Odds of a mic 3 coming out soon are high
1. the Mic 3 is about to be announced.
2. the Mic Mini is much newer and cheaper than this.
This isn't the DJI Mic 2.
Also the Mic Mini is out and cheaper.
Mic 3 expected to be released in a few weeks.
mini is not an option for me because it's missing internal storage option - it must be connected to a camera
mini is not an option for me because it's missing internal storage option - it must be connected to a camera
TLDR: spend a bit more and get something with internal recording.
That being said, if you want something that's equally "capable" of 32-bit, I picked up the Mic Mini bundle and a Zoom H1 Essential. All in, they're cheaper than the Mic 2 bundle, and honestly not much more than this bundle.
You get a more compact mic on your person, you get 32-bit anywhere and everywhere, and if you carry the recorder on your person, then you effectively have limitless range as well as "onboard recording."
The Zoom H1 means I always have a 32-bit backup as well. So even if the Mic Mini's run out of battery, as long as I have back up microSD cards and AAA batteries, I'm set.
Curious to see what the Mic 3 offers.
Also though, I picked up the Røde Wireless Go 3 and love it. A little bit bigger, but they back their products longer and it has onboard storage, decent battery life and 32-bit by default.
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- 32-bit float internal recording. Wireless transmission is 24-bit just like the Mic 1. This won't affect 99% of users though if you vaguely set the gain to something reasonable.
- Tight integration with ecosystem. The DJI Mic 2's connect via bluetooth to their other products wirelessly, like the Osmo 7P, Pocket 3, Action 4/5 Pro. If you want to connect the DJI Mic 1 to these devices, you need to connect a 3.5mm cable from the transmitter to the device.
- Hotshoe adapter. I have the Sony FX6 and A7iv. I don't need a 3.5mm cable anymore to connect the receiver to the camera. This allows for direct digital audio recording instead of doing a digital->analog conversion with the cable. No real quality difference that I've seen, but much more convenient not dealing with a cable. The FX6 doesn't have a 3.5mm in port, so I can only use that adapter to direct record to it.
I don't like the huge DJI logo addition to the Mic 2's, so I just put some gaff tape covering them. They are pretty obnoxious and obvious on camera, but hides well under black gaff tape.- 32-bit float internal recording. Wireless transmission is 24-bit just like the Mic 1. This won't affect 99% of users though if you vaguely set the gain to something reasonable.
- Tight integration with ecosystem. The DJI Mic 2's connect via bluetooth to their other products wirelessly, like the Osmo 7P, Pocket 3, Action 4/5 Pro. If you want to connect the DJI Mic 1 to these devices, you need to connect a 3.5mm cable from the transmitter to the device.
- Hotshoe adapter. I have the Sony FX6 and A7iv. I don't need a 3.5mm cable anymore to connect the receiver to the camera. This allows for direct digital audio recording instead of doing a digital->analog conversion with the cable. No real quality difference that I've seen, but much more convenient not dealing with a cable. The FX6 doesn't have a 3.5mm in port, so I can only use that adapter to direct record to it.
I don't like the huge DJI logo addition to the Mic 2's, so I just put some gaff tape covering them. They are pretty obnoxious and obvious on camera, but hides well under black gaff tape.thanks for the info!
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