I’m a newbie. I need to connect my DJI Mic to the R5C but need to know how to do that and what settings to put in the R5C. None isn’t the videos on the Tacam actually show how to. Any help would be appreciated.
The DJI Mics should come with with a TRS cable to connect the receiver to the camera. You can adjust the levels on the receiver or on the camera in the audio settings.
@@global001 Wait. So you have an R5C and a DJI mic and never thought to use the cable that came with the DJI mic and plug it into the mic port of the R5C?
That was a smart move to create the analog connection. Do the limiters and phantom power options still work? Also, I was confused when you said you used the Panasonic camera, then threw b-roll of the Canon camera while the band was playing. Please clarify. Thank you.
The B roll shot you mentioned is of the S5ii not the R5C. You can use the phantom power and limiter etc with the analog connection - the AT stereo mic used to record the band with the S5ii requires phantom power. The battery sled needs to be used to provide power.
It’s an interesting product but expensive considering it’s not capable of storing an internal recording itself. The zoom F3 is half the price, records in 32 bit float and is still capable of sending a signal to the camera.
I have a Canon R5C and am trying to work on rigging it out with this device included. It looks like it is really going to tough to include a top handle and a monitor with this beast installed. Do you have any thoughts or advice on this?
Looking at getting this for a Canon R6MK2. Will it record 2 separate channels of audio at once? My goal is to have two audio channels to work with in post production. For example shooting a wedding video where i have a microphone on someone and I'm also wired into a PA or want audio off a shotgun mic.
What would you use this mic adapter to record?
I think I'd probably use it as a door stop. Or put an annoying neighbours windows out. it's a whacking great brick isn't it. 😂😂😂😂😂😂
When it first came out, I heard tons of those units went bad and Tascam took forever to fix them. Is it still a problem?
Thank you! We had a great time.
Anybody found a good case for this adapter?
I’m a newbie. I need to connect my DJI Mic to the R5C but need to know how to do that and what settings to put in the R5C. None isn’t the videos on the Tacam actually show how to. Any help would be appreciated.
The DJI Mics should come with with a TRS cable to connect the receiver to the camera. You can adjust the levels on the receiver or on the camera in the audio settings.
@@BandH Thanks so much. It works a dream!
@@global001 Wait. So you have an R5C and a DJI mic and never thought to use the cable that came with the DJI mic and plug it into the mic port of the R5C?
@ it hadn’t worked previously. Chill.
@@global001 lol
That was a smart move to create the analog connection. Do the limiters and phantom power options still work?
Also, I was confused when you said you used the Panasonic camera, then threw b-roll of the Canon camera while the band was playing. Please clarify. Thank you.
The B roll shot you mentioned is of the S5ii not the R5C. You can use the phantom power and limiter etc with the analog connection - the AT stereo mic used to record the band with the S5ii requires phantom power. The battery sled needs to be used to provide power.
It’s an interesting product but expensive considering it’s not capable of storing an internal recording itself.
The zoom F3 is half the price, records in 32 bit float and is still capable of sending a signal to the camera.
I have a Canon R5C and am trying to work on rigging it out with this device included. It looks like it is really going to tough to include a top handle and a monitor with this beast installed. Do you have any thoughts or advice on this?
Reach out to one of our audio experts. They will know all about the TASCAM XLR adapter. Email your questions to askbh@bhphoto.com
Looking at getting this for a Canon R6MK2. Will it record 2 separate channels of audio at once? My goal is to have two audio channels to work with in post production. For example shooting a wedding video where i have a microphone on someone and I'm also wired into a PA or want audio off a shotgun mic.
Yes. On the camera it will record one channel on the left and the other channel on the right. Your editing software can separate them on the timeline.