Windshear Posted June 3, 2014 Posted June 3, 2014 Greetings, I won a GoPro (Hero 3+ Silver) around two weeks ago and I've taken it up flying with a cable which allows the camera to record audio from the intercom and pick up all radio chatter. On my recordings, the audio has came across as extremely faint and inaudibly quiet at some parts of the flight. The other aircraft in the area came across even worse. My attempts to amplify and clean up were not met with success. Here were my raw results: (And appreciate it if you don't share this one) I'm just generally asking if anyone has any solutions or suggestions because I know there a few of you on here who frequently use GoPro's. Many thanks in advance.
mAgNeToDrOp Posted June 3, 2014 Posted June 3, 2014 Ive tried similar adapters and it will capture only what's going through the intercom, as I'm sure you know already. Personally I prefer using a lapel mic inside my headset, so it records what you hear, including some engine noise and the radio chatter. I used a cheap eBay lapel mic and works great.
Windshear Posted June 3, 2014 Author Posted June 3, 2014 I should have specified I'm looking for intercom audio only. The problem is that it is extremely quiet. I don't want to have to go through the fuss of returning the cable though. I'll definitely try the lapel mic next time. Thanks for the tip!
mkennard Posted June 3, 2014 Posted June 3, 2014 Can't remember where I got the double adapter but it plugs into my headset socket. Then a curly extension to the go pro audio cable which I got off ebay and this works perfectly. I can't remember where I got the double adapter from but I would say some aviation shop. I also had to get a new case for the go pro so the cable would fit in the side. I could have drilled a hole but wanted to save that case for water sports.
Cosmick Posted June 3, 2014 Posted June 3, 2014 Some chatter on GoPro forum re this issue http://goprouser.freeforums.org/external-miicrophone-sound-problem-t13369.html 1
barramundi Posted June 14, 2014 Posted June 14, 2014 you can use a digital voice recorder and a audio splitter. I have only seen this on youtube and not tried it myself though.
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