Lucky? I don’t know about that. Yes. Okay. You worked at another larger channel. And you earned the subscribers you have today by being a genuine person who we want to watch on a regular basis. So by building on your work you gained credibility and an audience. I’d say hard consistent work got you here today.
I concur. We wouldnt have followed him if he wasnt a genuine and likeable person that we want to watch and follow. There is SO much content to watch these days so luck certainly isnt what keeps us all here.
Agreed. Spite is the kind of person I'd want as a friend so I could ask them all sorts of motorcycle questions. And that's what I feel I get: A normal guy who brings a great, positive passion for motorcycles and who will share their knowledge and passion with those around them. Glad it's working out for Spite. He's earned the success.
Yeah, seems like he gets easy luck with this channel. But it is easy to forget that he has been working hard for years now. Maybe this channel has not seen hundreds of miles yet but the work he put in at yasmine noob can not be forgotten! He worked hard and earned it!
It's almost like making professional, well-crafted, well-edited video content is actually quite hard, and a lot of work... All jokes aside, this is a really interesting insight into another profession, especially one that every man and his dog thinks is easy. I remember a certain someone on a certain channel associated with Spite's recent history saying that they wanted to make videos not "sit in an office all day long" and I remember thinking that good quality video content surely requires a LOT of time in an office, because scripting, coordinating with outside stakeholders (Guests, suppliers, sponsors etc) and editing and refining doesn't magically get done by itself...
Another option to save money and still get a great package: Davinci Resolve is a top tier editing package (used by professional movie studios) and is totally free unless you want to use multiple monitors or external specialty hardware. There are a ton of tutorials online for learning it.
For my first motovlog I recorded my ramblings with my Cardo and phone. It did work ok, but not the best. Still, works well enough for starting. And as long as the video quality is good enough, the audio, in my opinion, was/is good enough. Good tips!
Beautiful behind the scenes looks to the workflow; specific to moto vlogging. Thank you so much. Being a photo and video editor for over 20 years, I know first hand how time consuming it is to put clips together for a cohesive and watchable presentation. Success to the future!
Thanks for the tip about shouting into the mic before starting to record, I'll remember that. You truly know the craft of vlogging and after every video I realize more and more how much of a professional you are. Cheers for all the fine content.
Hey man, loved your work for awhile now. As someone who does this for the fun of it. I really got a lot out of your tips on everything. Don't know what I'll implement. But it's stuff to think about on the way. Cheers again!
Thank you for sharing these tips. I am starting a moto-themed channel and have faced a number of challenges with audio, video, etc. This is helping a lot! ESPECIALLY the constant power crossfade.
What a great, comprehensive, and direct instructional video. Showing all the nuances and details makes all the difference. I think you’ve demonstrated that incredibly well in this video. Thank you!
Great info! I've been drooling over the idea of getting the X3 for the past few weeks and you pushed me over the edge! Thanks for the free selfie stick Spite! Also, thanks for continuing to share such great content and I am looking forward to seeing what you continue to produce.
Perfect timing. I was just looking into this last night. I just want to record my rides so I can watch them in the winter when I can’t ride do to living in New England.
I think you are the most relatable and real, type of person I watch on TH-cam. Great video and I’ve noted quite a bit stuff that I should be doing personally Thanks!
That exact boom mic is out of stock, but the extension is available. Paired it with a 3rd party mic for a turtle beach headset. Both came as two packs for $20 so the $10 per setup holds.
I was editing one of my own videos after watching this video, and now I hear the click between audio tracks on clips. Thanks for showing an easy fix to solve a problem I didn't know I had.
Thank you in advance Spite! Your videos are very high quality and this is a very big help, I hope you continue on this topic in the future. I'm almost 50 and have no idea how to shoot and edit with today's digital, hell we had 35mm and 110mm for still photos and VHS camcorders in the 80's and they cost an arm and a leg back then! Love your content and this title really excited me to the point I had to make this comment before even watching the video!
Alternative to the Rode: I use a Hollyland Lark M1. TINY thing. 8+ hours battery, claimed 600 foot range (I'm sure it doesn't go that far though). Receiver and two transmitters and a charging case goes on sale for $120 pretty often. Reviewed to be comparable to the Rode setup but much smaller and the transmitter has the microphone built in so just one tiny thing to clip onto a shirt collar and you're ready to go.
9:30 is the reason I'm here!! Just got back from a ride that I thought was awesome. I was excited for the footage but when I got home the camera was pointing in the wrong direction :( Looking forward to improving my filming with these tips
This is probably my favorite video of what you use and how you use it to make videos. I had an Insta360 x2 but the audio was so bad and I didn't want to buy an external mic and do the work to sync it so I sold it. I'm also not willing to buy Primier, so I used a free video editor that probably isn't very good. Editing the 360 video does take extra time, especially if it's your only camera as you need to choose what is being looked at and rotate it around in editing quite a bit. I'd like to try a GoPro since it's a fixed camera and very simple editing required, plus the mic can be put inside the helmet like you showed so wouldn't need to do syncing or spend on external mics. For vlog stuff I have a Canon m6 mk2 that does a great job and the mic on it is good, plus a gimbal mount if I feel like walking around a parked bike for example to keep things smooth. Everything with this is time consuming and is basically like having a 2nd job or 1st job if it's the only thing you do.
Great in depth video Spite. Thanks for the editing tips and especially the communication mic next to the camera mic(I think that might have been my issue). 🤘
Spite this is the best video to date, love all your work "day in the saddle," "New Announcements," and "First Feelings." but this is the best one, i have the equipment and i dont plan on making videos, but just for quick post in IG, but i main have it to record encase of an accident "knock on wood" and thank you for the tips...
the audio click that you hear, is because the audio wave doesnt reach 0 during the transition... adding a volume envelope at the very end and beginning of both clips can get rid of that... or like you added, a crossfade, which essentially is doing the same thing.
Thanks Spite for the insight. I am having a hard time with video quality. I figured that was what was happening, when uploading to TH-cam the quality would change. This just confirms my suspicion.
So you neglected to go over the cables you use straight for. The go pro to mic, how it’s set up, where it’s located in the helmet for best quality, and where to find the panda mic and stuff like that…
Cool video, as someone who's currently attempting to film/edit/publish their first moto vlog videos, gear and process advice like this is much appreciated! Some of the things that get on my nerves from other vloggers, are when they only use the built in mics on their cameras/phones making their audio distant and unclear, or bopping around with their hand-held camera so nothing is in frame and you get seasick from all the jiggling. A better secondary mic attachment is cheap and slapping that camera on a tripod or gimble would help immensely. Another thing I'm doing with my videos, is investing in a Voice Over set up (mic, recording software, audio interface, pop/isolation shields), I don't trust myself to be able to ride or demonstrate maintenance/mods and talk at the same time. On that note, yet another thing that gets on my nerves, is when people read from a script in their videos and it's really noticeable they're reading it (@MCrider I love your channel, but seriously). It's best to get an outline together of what you want to say, then just naturally speak like you're talking to someone in the room.
This was a very insightful watch. Appreciate the total honesty with the tips. I went out for a spin to try a motovlog for the first time and came too realised him much brain power it actually involves.
Nice peak inside the YT video profession. Useful stuff Spite, well done! Also it's not just luck, you're a great guy and me and many others enjoy watching your videos and support you that way.
This is a great video with lots of tips. I'm particularly happy to hear that you shoot at 1080p/24fps. My DJI Action 2 will actually do that without overheating & is my favourite camera for chin mounting due to it's size & weight. Speaking of chin mounts, I wish that you'd gone into more detail about yours in the video. I would have been interested in hearing your take because it's not as straightforward as most other mounting points. There are a number of different mounting options available, and from personal experience a lot of them suck. A few words of wisdom about how you came to choose yours would have been the icing on the cake for me.
I use the MotoRadd mount, it's in the description above. It's super sturdy and low profile, while being universal to just about every full face helmet on the market.
I don't do vlogging but I use a Cannon M6 mk2 for video and a Zoom H5 for audio. I'm a crew of one but it helps that I can monitor audio throughout the shoot. I don't know about Tesco but Zooms have a safety feature where it will record a second copy of the audio at a lower gain so I have a backup if the audio gets blown out. I use the Cyberlink's Director Suite 365 so I can edit and color grade in one place.
Great video! Thanks for all the tips and the details about video editing. I'm about to get serious about my moto vlog and you helped me get better educated about it. Thank you.
AWESOME video. I'm going to watch this one a few times. Thanks for showing the behind the scenes work in Premiere. I just built a new editing PC because I was tired of editing on my laptop. It only cost me about half of actual retail.
Good stuff Spite. I enjoyed the look behind the curtain so to speak. Keep it up man! 🤘 That cable is a great suggestion also! Could save a lot of headaches with audio peaking etc.
Just started making videos for Instagram. I’m editing them down for stories and reels right now and adding music because I haven’t quite figured out how to remove the crackling on the mic ted for sound. I really want to just vlog and maybe even have these videos for my son later in life where he can just hear his dad talking about life.
About four or five years ago when I filmed my bicycle rides from Incheon to Busan, in Korea, I started out with a mixture of GoPro and a couple iPhones. I was using iMovie to make the videos, and when I would merge in the various media from the GoPro and the iPhones, I could not figure out how to get all of the different media to line up in the correct timeline. The iPhone would merge in no problem, but the GoPro would be all over the place and it was a soup sandwich, trying to put it in chronological order in the editing process, so eventually I gave up using the dual type of media and just use iPhones. But now I am getting ready to do some ADV type writing here in the south east part of the United States around Alabama, and I’m thinking about going back to some of the GoPro‘s because they mount so easily on the bike. But I am dreading how the heck am I going to edit all of that media into the videos. Thanks for putting this video out, it is really cool to see how other people make their videos.
Firstly, i'm a new motorcycle adventure channel, and as such I know this will be a hidden comment lol 😆 Just wanted to say that I pretty much use all the same gear as you and that your description of how it actually is to solo produce a bike video is spot on 😀 Well done 👏 and I learned a few new things off you today Thank you, now subscribed Mike from Australia 🇦🇺 (sometimes)
Really interesting Spite! Thank you, very enjoyable even though I will never do any YT'ing. This goes to show the tremendous effort, skill, and knowledge goes into your content.
Another great video. Thank you for sharing the work that goes on behind the scenes. I found it daunting, though very interesting. Keep them coming please!
I like using two camera's, like you said, one on the helmet and one on the bars. I actually like having both so I can hide my edits easier by going back and forth instead of having the video jump over and over as I ride
Spite...another GREAT video. Only this time, it's a great video on how to make great videos. Even though I'm a bit older than you, Spite (I remember when Da Bears were a force to be reckoned with), I'd love to "bend elbows" with you, should our paths ever cross. (Make mine a Diet Coke.)
As an alternative to GoPros, I've been happy with cheaper action cams from Amazon. I use Akasos and like them, I've also heard good things about Dragon Touch cams, I suspect they're all the same on the inside anyway. Obviously a GoPro is better, but even used one cost hundreds of dollars, and it would hurt to have that fall off my bike or helmet.
I've been using a Dragon Touch for a few years, they're decent for the money. Battery life is only about 60mins but the batteries are cheap and I just charge my spare in my tank bag
Very informative. Couple questions in case you do a followup: 1: do you tether your cameras incase they fall off? 2: How do you keep track of battery level? My GP10 doesn't last that long and on a long ride I could see the battery going flat. (maybe external batteries?) and 3: do you just turn on the cameras and leave them on or do you use a remote to start/stop. I have the GP Remote but while it can control 2+ cameras the Max doesn't support waking up so you have to leave the cameras on the full time.
Loved the video - although I'm not wanting to do motorcycle videos like you do, I would like to improve my holiday and trip videos ...some useful notes here for my next jaunt!
I’ll probably never go back to using a pc for editing. Macs forever at this point. I use a hackintosh rn but once I saw a unbiased comparison I realized I needed to try it out and I could never edit so quickly on a pc at this point
@@spitescorner agree 100%. One of My Macs is great for gaming because it’s a hackintosh with a AMD 7950x & just got the 4090 for it, but I’ve long ago accepted I will just happily have a home server & use a pc for what I want it for and the Mac’s for the other things. They play along together perfectly so no need to choose one or the other for me
For riding off road filming at 1080P60 helps take a lot of the stutter out of the video from bumps and such. You lose the motion blur, but you can actually see what's going on.
Really useful information! I'm definitely trying these tricks especially the in helmet setup. I can't seem to get it just right so I'm really happy you made this video.
Thanks Spite I wondered how you got things sounding and looking so good. For audio I use a zoom f2-bt with 32bit float so you don’t have to worry about sound level. It won’t clip ever your mic will distort before the audio clips. It’s great for helmet audio too. The included lav mic is not to bad and unit is tucked inside my jacket and is about the size of a matchbox so if you happen to come off your bike the unit itself is very unlikely to hurt you. My camera is a Nikon z30 and I use GoPro Hero 4 solver and black they are cheap as. As for back ground noise i use Davinci resolve which is free and it has voice isolation which is pure Black Magic and has saved me from either reshooting or doing a voice over. I use the studio version to speed up rendering.
@@spitescorner 32 bit float takes the guesswork out of it even if the signal level is really low or loads in clipped you either raise or lower the level and it’s all there like magic without introducing noise or distortion. It saved my but a few times and saved reshooting or doing a voice over. If you ever get tired of premier crashing and not saving take Davinci Resolve for a test spin even the free version is amazing and can do pretty much everything premier does. Their voice isolation is pure Black Magic if you have wind or background noise. That beast PC of yours will run it extraordinarily well. Especially if you opt for the studio version later.
@@bikegeist ohh. Yes and the mic in my helmet when it first loads into Fairlight looks like it’s all clipped but ya just drop the level and it’s sweeeeet as. On my previous Zoom H4n Pro even recorded at 24 bit at a lowered DB I would always get background noise or excessive wind noise. But that was before Black Magic added Voice Isolation in Resolve. I had a shoot that was ruined with excessive background noise and it fixed it so I uploaded it.
@@PubRunner Do you process with compression or just bring the level down manually in specific areas? I don't think I have the workflow right yet. I feel like compression is the way to go, but....🤔 I know nothing. 😆
A lot of us have an intercom system with a mic inside our helmet. Aside of an app on the phone recording the voice from the intercom (which require to clapsync), isn't it a way to directly use this mic with a gopro ? Maybe with a Y cable ? If gorpo app allowed to use the input audio from the phone it would be awesome. No wiring needed.
Excellent information, thanks for sharing it. I use Pinnacle Studio only because I've been using it for years but it works good for me. You gave lots of good tips!
TODAY IS THE LAST DAY TO GET ENTERED TO WIN THE RIDE ADV TRAINING WEEKEND! bit.ly/3Cu4HLs
Wherever possible try not to have giveaways ever on the day you release a video, although I guess there’s bk good solution to that never mind. Shane.
6:15 a ND filter darkens light coming into the lens to allow a higher aperture on bright Sunny days to get that bokeh/ background out of focus look.
Lucky? I don’t know about that. Yes. Okay. You worked at another larger channel. And you earned the subscribers you have today by being a genuine person who we want to watch on a regular basis. So by building on your work you gained credibility and an audience. I’d say hard consistent work got you here today.
I concur. We wouldnt have followed him if he wasnt a genuine and likeable person that we want to watch and follow. There is SO much content to watch these days so luck certainly isnt what keeps us all here.
Agreed. Spite is the kind of person I'd want as a friend so I could ask them all sorts of motorcycle questions. And that's what I feel I get: A normal guy who brings a great, positive passion for motorcycles and who will share their knowledge and passion with those around them. Glad it's working out for Spite. He's earned the success.
Yeah, seems like he gets easy luck with this channel. But it is easy to forget that he has been working hard for years now. Maybe this channel has not seen hundreds of miles yet but the work he put in at yasmine noob can not be forgotten!
He worked hard and earned it!
I’ve never watched an entire video on the other guy’s channel but I dig this channel.
Yeah agreed. Bit of luck? Probably. But capitalizing on it with hard work and a honest channel sealed the deal.
It's almost like making professional, well-crafted, well-edited video content is actually quite hard, and a lot of work... All jokes aside, this is a really interesting insight into another profession, especially one that every man and his dog thinks is easy.
I remember a certain someone on a certain channel associated with Spite's recent history saying that they wanted to make videos not "sit in an office all day long" and I remember thinking that good quality video content surely requires a LOT of time in an office, because scripting, coordinating with outside stakeholders (Guests, suppliers, sponsors etc) and editing and refining doesn't magically get done by itself...
There's so much admin work that I do nowadays. There's so many things to manage that didn't even make the video lol. Glad you enjoyed it!
Your humility and willingness to share techniques with your community is awesome. Thank you!
Another option to save money and still get a great package: Davinci Resolve is a top tier editing package (used by professional movie studios) and is totally free unless you want to use multiple monitors or external specialty hardware. There are a ton of tutorials online for learning it.
For my first motovlog I recorded my ramblings with my Cardo and phone. It did work ok, but not the best. Still, works well enough for starting. And as long as the video quality is good enough, the audio, in my opinion, was/is good enough. Good tips!
Always fun to startup a channel. If your on the fence, do some research and make it happen 🙂
Beautiful behind the scenes looks to the workflow; specific to moto vlogging. Thank you so much. Being a photo and video editor for over 20 years, I know first hand how time consuming it is to put clips together for a cohesive and watchable presentation. Success to the future!
It takes a lot of time and effort to make something that when done right appears spontaneous and effortless.
Thanks for the tip about shouting into the mic before starting to record, I'll remember that. You truly know the craft of vlogging and after every video I realize more and more how much of a professional you are. Cheers for all the fine content.
Hey man, loved your work for awhile now. As someone who does this for the fun of it. I really got a lot out of your tips on everything. Don't know what I'll implement. But it's stuff to think about on the way. Cheers again!
Thank you for sharing these tips. I am starting a moto-themed channel and have faced a number of challenges with audio, video, etc. This is helping a lot! ESPECIALLY the constant power crossfade.
Spite Rules!!! This was fun. Rock on!
I have enormous respect for those who are so open, honest, and secure. I love your channel.
It's like you read my mind with this video! Perfect timing 👌
What a great, comprehensive, and direct instructional video. Showing all the nuances and details makes all the difference. I think you’ve demonstrated that incredibly well in this video. Thank you!
Great info! I've been drooling over the idea of getting the X3 for the past few weeks and you pushed me over the edge! Thanks for the free selfie stick Spite! Also, thanks for continuing to share such great content and I am looking forward to seeing what you continue to produce.
I have that helmet in black and red and the Shoei RF-1400 and you are 100% correct about having a quiet helmet. It makes a world of difference!!!
Perfect timing. I was just looking into this last night. I just want to record my rides so I can watch them in the winter when I can’t ride do to living in New England.
This was exactly what I needed, lookin to get into Vlogs in 2023. Thanks Man :)
I think you are the most relatable and real, type of person I watch on TH-cam. Great video and I’ve noted quite a bit stuff that I should be doing personally Thanks!
Thank you for making this video Spite. I have found a lot of helpful tips. Love the show. Keep up the great editing.
This. A great amount of information that saves fresh content creators from making mistakes. Thanks, Spite.
That exact boom mic is out of stock, but the extension is available. Paired it with a 3rd party mic for a turtle beach headset. Both came as two packs for $20 so the $10 per setup holds.
I was editing one of my own videos after watching this video, and now I hear the click between audio tracks on clips. Thanks for showing an easy fix to solve a problem I didn't know I had.
came for the set up, stayed for the tips. Appreciate you Spite!
The 4k export trick IS HUGE. thanks dude! Going to try this today or this weekend with my footage.
Thank you in advance Spite! Your videos are very high quality and this is a very big help, I hope you continue on this topic in the future. I'm almost 50 and have no idea how to shoot and edit with today's digital, hell we had 35mm and 110mm for still photos and VHS camcorders in the 80's and they cost an arm and a leg back then! Love your content and this title really excited me to the point I had to make this comment before even watching the video!
I really appreciate your upfront and down to earth intro to the video and your explanations of details. Good vid
Alternative to the Rode: I use a Hollyland Lark M1. TINY thing. 8+ hours battery, claimed 600 foot range (I'm sure it doesn't go that far though). Receiver and two transmitters and a charging case goes on sale for $120 pretty often. Reviewed to be comparable to the Rode setup but much smaller and the transmitter has the microphone built in so just one tiny thing to clip onto a shirt collar and you're ready to go.
This is by far the most comprehensive video I've seen on Motovlogging.
he is so polite. Hearing Spite tell me that i DONT NEED the most expensive studio gear just motivates.
9:30 is the reason I'm here!! Just got back from a ride that I thought was awesome. I was excited for the footage but when I got home the camera was pointing in the wrong direction :(
Looking forward to improving my filming with these tips
This is probably my favorite video of what you use and how you use it to make videos. I had an Insta360 x2 but the audio was so bad and I didn't want to buy an external mic and do the work to sync it so I sold it. I'm also not willing to buy Primier, so I used a free video editor that probably isn't very good. Editing the 360 video does take extra time, especially if it's your only camera as you need to choose what is being looked at and rotate it around in editing quite a bit. I'd like to try a GoPro since it's a fixed camera and very simple editing required, plus the mic can be put inside the helmet like you showed so wouldn't need to do syncing or spend on external mics. For vlog stuff I have a Canon m6 mk2 that does a great job and the mic on it is good, plus a gimbal mount if I feel like walking around a parked bike for example to keep things smooth. Everything with this is time consuming and is basically like having a 2nd job or 1st job if it's the only thing you do.
great info Spite, much appreciated, especially the editing portion.
Great in depth video Spite. Thanks for the editing tips and especially the communication mic next to the camera mic(I think that might have been my issue). 🤘
Your tip about familiar roads is gold - great vid - great channel
Spite this is the best video to date, love all your work "day in the saddle," "New Announcements," and "First Feelings." but this is the best one, i have the equipment and i dont plan on making videos, but just for quick post in IG, but i main have it to record encase of an accident "knock on wood" and thank you for the tips...
the audio click that you hear, is because the audio wave doesnt reach 0 during the transition... adding a volume envelope at the very end and beginning of both clips can get rid of that... or like you added, a crossfade, which essentially is doing the same thing.
Thanks Spite for the insight. I am having a hard time with video quality. I figured that was what was happening, when uploading to TH-cam the quality would change. This just confirms my suspicion.
Great intro to motovlogs, equipment and editing. Really well put together, thanks Spite!
The passion and commitment really shine through. SC obvious labor of love.
So you neglected to go over the cables you use straight for. The go pro to mic, how it’s set up, where it’s located in the helmet for best quality, and where to find the panda mic and stuff like that…
Cool video, as someone who's currently attempting to film/edit/publish their first moto vlog videos, gear and process advice like this is much appreciated! Some of the things that get on my nerves from other vloggers, are when they only use the built in mics on their cameras/phones making their audio distant and unclear, or bopping around with their hand-held camera so nothing is in frame and you get seasick from all the jiggling. A better secondary mic attachment is cheap and slapping that camera on a tripod or gimble would help immensely.
Another thing I'm doing with my videos, is investing in a Voice Over set up (mic, recording software, audio interface, pop/isolation shields), I don't trust myself to be able to ride or demonstrate maintenance/mods and talk at the same time. On that note, yet another thing that gets on my nerves, is when people read from a script in their videos and it's really noticeable they're reading it (@MCrider I love your channel, but seriously). It's best to get an outline together of what you want to say, then just naturally speak like you're talking to someone in the room.
Hey, Spite! Great to come across your channel. Thanks for this video.
im new to this. jump cut blew my mind, thanks.
This was a very insightful watch. Appreciate the total honesty with the tips. I went out for a spin to try a motovlog for the first time and came too realised him much brain power it actually involves.
Brah!!!!! I am so glad I saw the editing part. Thank you.
I wish I could do what you guys do...
You make it look easy
Nice peak inside the YT video profession. Useful stuff Spite, well done! Also it's not just luck, you're a great guy and me and many others enjoy watching your videos and support you that way.
Hey Spite, I really love this video because I've been looking into motovlogging and I have always enjoyed your content. Keep up the good work man.
This is a great video with lots of tips. I'm particularly happy to hear that you shoot at 1080p/24fps. My DJI Action 2 will actually do that without overheating & is my favourite camera for chin mounting due to it's size & weight.
Speaking of chin mounts, I wish that you'd gone into more detail about yours in the video. I would have been interested in hearing your take because it's not as straightforward as most other mounting points. There are a number of different mounting options available, and from personal experience a lot of them suck. A few words of wisdom about how you came to choose yours would have been the icing on the cake for me.
I use the MotoRadd mount, it's in the description above. It's super sturdy and low profile, while being universal to just about every full face helmet on the market.
Shift-Ctrl-D on PC is a default short cut for the audio transition. Huge time saver
Thank you Spite for giving back and sharing your tools and process with us.
I don't do vlogging but I use a Cannon M6 mk2 for video and a Zoom H5 for audio. I'm a crew of one but it helps that I can monitor audio throughout the shoot. I don't know about Tesco but Zooms have a safety feature where it will record a second copy of the audio at a lower gain so I have a backup if the audio gets blown out. I use the Cyberlink's Director Suite 365 so I can edit and color grade in one place.
Great video! Thanks for all the tips and the details about video editing. I'm about to get serious about my moto vlog and you helped me get better educated about it. Thank you.
I have to occasionally make videos at work with Premiere Pro. I also have a process I follow but I picked up some really cool tips here. Thanks!!
Wow, that was a super thorough overview. My workflow is very similar. I hope our paths cross in 2023. It would be fun to hang out.
Heck yeah, you got me on the KLR. Would love to meet up.
It's great to see how much you do to make a great quality video. Cheers
Came here for a camera setup, ended up getting a full video making tutorial and I'm not mad about it. Will come back to this video
AWESOME video. I'm going to watch this one a few times. Thanks for showing the behind the scenes work in Premiere. I just built a new editing PC because I was tired of editing on my laptop. It only cost me about half of actual retail.
Good stuff Spite. I enjoyed the look behind the curtain so to speak.
Keep it up man! 🤘
That cable is a great suggestion also! Could save a lot of headaches with audio peaking etc.
Everyone always says to just find a low output mic, but that never worked for me. This makes life so much simpler
Just started making videos for Instagram. I’m editing them down for stories and reels right now and adding music because I haven’t quite figured out how to remove the crackling on the mic ted for sound. I really want to just vlog and maybe even have these videos for my son later in life where he can just hear his dad talking about life.
Thank you Spite the advice and help is much appreciated.
Really useful information, im getting into motovlogging and this was the video to rule them all! Thanks for the video!
This is a great video! I will definitely be refering back to it a few times as I slowly improve my editing skills.
Such a killer video man, super thorough. I love my insta x3, such a great camera.
Just recently I've been wondering, 'Damn i wish Spite would make a video about his set up'! Thanks man!
About four or five years ago when I filmed my bicycle rides from Incheon to Busan, in Korea, I started out with a mixture of GoPro and a couple iPhones. I was using iMovie to make the videos, and when I would merge in the various media from the GoPro and the iPhones, I could not figure out how to get all of the different media to line up in the correct timeline. The iPhone would merge in no problem, but the GoPro would be all over the place and it was a soup sandwich, trying to put it in chronological order in the editing process, so eventually I gave up using the dual type of media and just use iPhones. But now I am getting ready to do some ADV type writing here in the south east part of the United States around Alabama, and I’m thinking about going back to some of the GoPro‘s because they mount so easily on the bike. But I am dreading how the heck am I going to edit all of that media into the videos. Thanks for putting this video out, it is really cool to see how other people make their videos.
Firstly, i'm a new motorcycle adventure channel, and as such I know this will be a hidden comment lol 😆
Just wanted to say that I pretty much use all the same gear as you and that your description of how it actually is to solo produce a bike video is spot on 😀
Well done 👏 and I learned a few new things off you today
Thank you, now subscribed
Mike from Australia 🇦🇺 (sometimes)
Really interesting Spite! Thank you, very enjoyable even though I will never do any YT'ing. This goes to show the tremendous effort, skill, and knowledge goes into your content.
Thanks! I'm glad you enjoyed the look behind the scenes.
Another great video. Thank you for sharing the work that goes on behind the scenes. I found it daunting, though very interesting. Keep them coming please!
Perfect timing, I'm in the middle of making some videos and am getting lost in editing and script stuff.
I like using two camera's, like you said, one on the helmet and one on the bars. I actually like having both so I can hide my edits easier by going back and forth instead of having the video jump over and over as I ride
Heck yeah, it helps make it so I almost look like I know what I'm doing too 😂
Spite...another GREAT video. Only this time, it's a great video on how to make great videos.
Even though I'm a bit older than you, Spite (I remember when Da Bears were a force to be reckoned with), I'd love to "bend elbows" with you, should our paths ever cross. (Make mine a Diet Coke.)
I have been looking for ways to record my rides with my dad to enjoy later and this has been wildly helpful! Thank you Spite :)
I love these kinds of videos. I actually enjoy using Premiere Pro. Now After Effects, that's where the real suffering is.
As an alternative to GoPros, I've been happy with cheaper action cams from Amazon. I use Akasos and like them, I've also heard good things about Dragon Touch cams, I suspect they're all the same on the inside anyway. Obviously a GoPro is better, but even used one cost hundreds of dollars, and it would hurt to have that fall off my bike or helmet.
I've been using a Dragon Touch for a few years, they're decent for the money. Battery life is only about 60mins but the batteries are cheap and I just charge my spare in my tank bag
Very informative. Couple questions in case you do a followup: 1: do you tether your cameras incase they fall off? 2: How do you keep track of battery level? My GP10 doesn't last that long and on a long ride I could see the battery going flat. (maybe external batteries?) and 3: do you just turn on the cameras and leave them on or do you use a remote to start/stop. I have the GP Remote but while it can control 2+ cameras the Max doesn't support waking up so you have to leave the cameras on the full time.
That was really good Spite. Lots of great, comprehensively covered tips. 👍
Appreciate you're thoughts and advice here Spite.
Loved the video - although I'm not wanting to do motorcycle videos like you do, I would like to improve my holiday and trip videos ...some useful notes here for my next jaunt!
I’ll probably never go back to using a pc for editing. Macs forever at this point. I use a hackintosh rn but once I saw a unbiased comparison I realized I needed to try it out and I could never edit so quickly on a pc at this point
Yeah Macs are much better machines for creatives. My tower is also my gaming rig though and gaming on a Mac isn't great
@@spitescorner agree 100%. One of My Macs is great for gaming because it’s a hackintosh with a AMD 7950x & just got the 4090 for it, but I’ve long ago accepted I will just happily have a home server & use a pc for what I want it for and the Mac’s for the other things. They play along together perfectly so no need to choose one or the other for me
For riding off road filming at 1080P60 helps take a lot of the stutter out of the video from bumps and such. You lose the motion blur, but you can actually see what's going on.
I'll give that a shot. I think the GoPro 10 can film at 1/120 shutter to keep the motion blur
Thanks for sharing us your workflow Spite!
Projecting the voice… I noticed on my couple videos that I was too calm/soft.
Thanks for this video. 👍
Really useful information! I'm definitely trying these tricks especially the in helmet setup. I can't seem to get it just right so I'm really happy you made this video.
new rider and always wondered how these vids were made. Might have to try my hand at creating some :)
Go for it! No time like the present.
DAMNIT I bought everything before I got past the 1:30 mark 😞
JK GoPro hero 4 for lyfe sucka
Said you and like no one else lol. Get with the times grandpa!
Thanks Spite I wondered how you got things sounding and looking so good.
For audio I use a zoom f2-bt with 32bit float so you don’t have to worry about sound level. It won’t clip ever your mic will distort before the audio clips. It’s great for helmet audio too. The included lav mic is not to bad and unit is tucked inside my jacket and is about the size of a matchbox so if you happen to come off your bike the unit itself is very unlikely to hurt you.
My camera is a Nikon z30 and I use GoPro Hero 4 solver and black they are cheap as.
As for back ground noise i use Davinci resolve which is free and it has voice isolation which is pure Black Magic and has saved me from either reshooting or doing a voice over. I use the studio version to speed up rendering.
I find the lower you record, the more headroom you have to play with in post. Took a long time to find the right settings though 😂
@@spitescorner 32 bit float takes the guesswork out of it even if the signal level is really low or loads in clipped you either raise or lower the level and it’s all there like magic without introducing noise or distortion. It saved my but a few times and saved reshooting or doing a voice over.
If you ever get tired of premier crashing and not saving take Davinci Resolve for a test spin even the free version is amazing and can do pretty much everything premier does. Their voice isolation is pure Black Magic if you have wind or background noise. That beast PC of yours will run it extraordinarily well. Especially if you opt for the studio version later.
+1 for the F2-BT. It's great.
@@bikegeist ohh. Yes and the mic in my helmet when it first loads into Fairlight looks like it’s all clipped but ya just drop the level and it’s sweeeeet as. On my previous Zoom H4n Pro even recorded at 24 bit at a lowered DB I would always get background noise or excessive wind noise. But that was before Black
Magic added Voice Isolation in Resolve. I had a shoot that was ruined with excessive background noise and it fixed it so I uploaded it.
@@PubRunner Do you process with compression or just bring the level down manually in specific areas? I don't think I have the workflow right yet. I feel like compression is the way to go, but....🤔 I know nothing. 😆
what category you choose for motovlog? travel and events?
A lot of us have an intercom system with a mic inside our helmet. Aside of an app on the phone recording the voice from the intercom (which require to clapsync), isn't it a way to directly use this mic with a gopro ? Maybe with a Y cable ?
If gorpo app allowed to use the input audio from the phone it would be awesome. No wiring needed.
It's doable, but most comm systems don't have a TRS style connector. The cardo uses a two pin. You'd need a very specialized cable for that.
put some white marks on the gopro helmet mount, that help with position
Haha, I do this too. Set it and forget it. 👍🏽
Excellent Video! Thanks for sharing and spending the right amount of time explaining end to end. New Sub!
There is the tiny instamic, bluetooth, connectable to the insta 360, not gopro though. or record audio separately .
I busted out laughing when you showed that awesome PC!!! Great video and thank you! 2 wheels down, bro. 🙂
Excellent information, thanks for sharing it. I use Pinnacle Studio only because I've been using it for years but it works good for me. You gave lots of good tips!
Impressive and informative. Subbed and many thanks you guy
Again, watching Spites amazing content!
I’m a fan now, very humble very human. Do you have stabilization on ?