charlie_hurst's Electronic Studio Setup
Location recording for Film/TV
More gear photos from charlie_hurst
Gear in this photo
This rig
~$3,822
Value by category
- Microphones 92.4%
- Headphones 7.6%
Boldest pick: Zoom F8 - Field Audio Recorder
Only 2 pro artists on Equipboard own it, but it's ranked #2 in Phantom Power Supplies.
Zoom F8 - Field Audio Recorder
Avg price: $961.74
Great entry level field recorder
Having used the Zoom F8 as a sound recordist for video production for the last 5 years I can safely say I’ve put it through its paces, and pushed it all the way to it’s limits.
The Zoom F8 is a versatile and effective field recorder, with clean preamps and solid timecode. Paired with the FRC8 mixing surface it makes for a budget conscious cart mixer. It is capable of Bluetooth control from an iPad, and can also be used as a multitrack USB interface in a variety of modes.
The menus are super simple and the metadata options work great. The display is decent enough for bright sunlight use too.
In a blind test I think you would struggle to pick it out against another field recorder of the same generation that might cost 10x the price. Interestingly it is still one of the only recorders on the market with 8 mic preamps. Sound Devices 888 is 10x the price.
In it’s most basic form you have 8 mic/line inputs and 4x output channels, which can be routed very flexibly from the IO matrix capable of delivering useful mixes to various different people on set.
Downsides: - There are no digital inputs or outputs. - The Mix channels are only routable from the pan selection. The pan law is set to increase volume at full pan so routing in this way can clip the mix bus, which isn’t ideal. - In EXT Timecode mode the pre-roll is disabled. - The headphone amp is a bit weak and seems to emphasise noise problems more than you’d like. It’s like a weird kind of compression. - The XLR inputs are mic level only, and the line level is accessed by the jack side of the combi-jack inputs. This means it doesn’t interface well with high end location kit which is all supplied with XLR’s and switchable output levels. (This is fixed in the F8n) - The output level of the main out is consumer line level rather than pro.
In all honesty though those are some pretty minor issues, and the pro’s far outweighs the cons. What you can achieve on the F8 is mighty impressive. I’ve done jobs that honestly would have been impossible on some more expensive machines.
I’m hesitantly upgrading soon, as I find I’m hitting its limitations more and more regularly. But the amount of money you have to spend to surpass everything this machine can do is frankly astounding! Find another machine with 8 channels that has access to all of the mix functions from the front panel… your instantly looking at 10x the cost of the F8.
Avg price: $291.32
Clinical Comfortable Headphones
These are my go to headphones for location recording, fault finding and noise hunting. Excellent acoustic isolation from external noises. Really great neutral sound with tons of detail, that will highlight spurious noises all over the place.
Avg price: $2,568.65
About this setup
This gear photo by charlie_hurst features 4 pieces of gear, including Zoom F8 - Field Audio Recorder, Sennheiser HD 26 PRO, and Schoeps CMC6xt MK41. The setup spans Microphones and Headphones. Artists with this kind of gear are most often found in the Electronic, Pop, and Edm scenes.