using a stereo mic (mke-440) for ch1 and ch 2, but the camera is still routing internal mic to 3,4 . How can we mute the 3rd and 4th unused channels when 3.5mm jack is used for 1,2?
The short answer is you can't. The routing is hard coded in the camera, as I described in the video and on page 105 of the manual. The only case where the 3.5mm input is put on channels 3 & 4 is when you also have a multi-function shoe audio device (like Canon's DM-E1D mic) in the hot shoe and your mic plugged into the 3.5mm connector.
Hi Jason, thank you for all videos. Can I ask you something you maybe able to help. What am I doing wrong? My canon 5rc alway shows 4 audio channel's? How do I go just to one that is connected to input with one mic only?
Put simply, you can't. One of the odd limitations of the R5C is that you cannot turn off, or at least stop it from recording, unneeded audio channels. It always records 4 in PCM mode, and a stereo mix down to 2 channels in AAC mode.
Thanks for the video. I'm experiencing some differences from what you are saying about the channels. When I play back the audio channels 1 and 2 seem to be taken by the built in mic. Channels 3 and 4 seem to be taken by the RODE SVM STEREO VIDEO X/Y CONDENSER CAMCORDER MICROPHONE. Premiere calls it Media Source Channel 1, 2, 3, 4. I came to the conclusion about the source/channels because the first 2 are mono, and 3 and 4 are stereo, and the quality. I had it on the shoe, but took it off, and that didn't change anything. Before I watched your video, where you said that the priority isn't changeable, I thought it may have been a settings difference. I use this audio sparingly, because I have a C70 that I connect my XLR shotgun mic to. Any suggestions or comment are appreciated?
The channel routing I described in the video is taken directly from page 105 in the R5C's manual (PDF version). It's been my experience, that the manual is correct and the camera route signals as described. However, if you're seeing something different than that, you'd have to ask Canon why. As for seeing a stereo track in Premiere... The only time the R5C records a stereo audio file is when it's in 2 channel AAC mode. In LPCM mode, the camera records 4 mono tracks and you have to tell you editing software to treat them as stereo. I haven't used Premiere for years, but I don't think it should be reorganizing the track structure, or presenting it any differently than it is in the files. So to that end, I'm not exactly sure what's going on there. Also, as far as I know, Rode doesn't have any mics that implement Canon's multi-function shoe. Just putting any mic in the camera's hotshoe doesn't change the routing order or how it's connected. The mic/AIF (specifically Canon's DM-E1D mic, or Tascam's CA-XLR2d-C audio interface) must connect through the pins in the front of the hotshoe for it to be a multi-function shoe device and get routed that way.
@@PointsInFocus I looked back at the footage, and I was incorrect. I was looking at the C70 footage. The R5C footage does reflect what you reported. 1-2 are the 3.5" mic input, and 3-4 does seem to be the internal mic.
The only thing you'd have to do in the menus is set the recording levels. Otherwise, it will automatically start recording the external mic when it detects one is plugged in.
how can i get three seperate audio inputs to record on three separate audio tracks? I have a saramonic LAV receiver with two transmitors, as well as a basic sennhieser shotgun mic. Will I have to record the two LAV mics as L and R on the same audio track and then separate them into individual audio tracks in post or is it possible to have them each record onto their own audio track and have the boom record onto a third since it defaults to creating 4 tracks anyway. Will a simple 3.5 cable splitter function if i plug both the receiver and shotgun mic into the same audio input or will it try to mix the audio inputs internally? I tried using the CKobal MX-1-V2 Two-Channel Mini Mixer with Shoe Bracket which seemed perfect for this problem, except that it did not work at all and couldn't even fasten to the top shoe securely enough for me to feel comfortable attaching mics or my monitor to it. Would love any suggestions, you are clearly an expert on this camera
I guess I could sell my boom mic and buy the canon brand one that works directly though the shoe, but is there a solution with the mic I currently have? or can it only record max 2 channels through the 3.5 Input regardless
I'm assuming that your Sarmonic wireless system outputs one mic puts each mid on each of the stereo channels. So one goes to left, one goes to right. If so, then you won't be able to use a simple passive cable to combine the output from that and your shotgun mic, you will need a mixer of some sort. The best option, in my opinion, at lest if you're serious about good quality audio, would be to get a proper 3-6 channel audio recorder and use that to record all of your audio. Something like a SoundDevices MixPre-3 II or a Zoom F6 would be idea, but you can of course go with something less expensive. Run everything into that, and either a time code cable back to the R5C or an attenuated patch from the recorders line out so you have good sync sound on the camera. Then use the audio sync function in your NLE (Resolve/Premiere Pro, etc.) to sync the good sound up in post. This will give you the most flexibility, and best possible quality audio. Barring that, you can get 2 more inputs for the R5C with a Tascam CA-XLR2d-C. This uses the multi-function shoe and provides a 24-bit pro level audio interface with 2 XLR/TRS combo jacks (with phantom power) and a 3.5mm (1/8") TRS unbalanced input jack; though you can only use one of the two at a time. You can use this in conjunction with the camera's 3.5mm mic in to record 4 channels independently. The CA-XLR2ds also have a mount for mic if you want to use a standard shotgun mic on camera. As for selling your Sennheiser shotgun mic and replacing it with a Canon DM-E1D... Keep in mind you can't take the Canon off camera. There's no provision for the extending the multi-function shoe connection and there's no 3.5mm option on that mic. All things considered, I don't think that mic is a great solution for most users. It might be ideal for a journalist with an R3 that doesn't want any stray cables, but for everyone else it's quite limiting in the long run.
I’m starting to wonder if when the cinema guys got hold of the camera to modify it they didn’t just add a processor or piggyback their on board and said eff those other guys.
This needs more views! Definitely helped me out a lot. I was here struggling to understand why my Sennheiser MKE600 was not working with my R5C 🤦🏽♂️.
Glad you found it helpful.
using a stereo mic (mke-440) for ch1 and ch 2, but the camera is still routing internal mic to 3,4 . How can we mute the 3rd and 4th unused channels when 3.5mm jack is used for 1,2?
The short answer is you can't. The routing is hard coded in the camera, as I described in the video and on page 105 of the manual. The only case where the 3.5mm input is put on channels 3 & 4 is when you also have a multi-function shoe audio device (like Canon's DM-E1D mic) in the hot shoe and your mic plugged into the 3.5mm connector.
Hi Jason, thank you for all videos. Can I ask you something you maybe able to help. What am I doing wrong? My canon 5rc alway shows 4 audio channel's? How do I go just to one that is connected to input with one mic only?
Put simply, you can't. One of the odd limitations of the R5C is that you cannot turn off, or at least stop it from recording, unneeded audio channels. It always records 4 in PCM mode, and a stereo mix down to 2 channels in AAC mode.
@@PointsInFocus thank you for your quick reply
Thanks for the video. I'm experiencing some differences from what you are saying about the channels. When I play back the audio channels 1 and 2 seem to be taken by the built in mic. Channels 3 and 4 seem to be taken by the RODE SVM STEREO VIDEO X/Y CONDENSER CAMCORDER MICROPHONE. Premiere calls it Media Source Channel 1, 2, 3, 4. I came to the conclusion about the source/channels because the first 2 are mono, and 3 and 4 are stereo, and the quality. I had it on the shoe, but took it off, and that didn't change anything. Before I watched your video, where you said that the priority isn't changeable, I thought it may have been a settings difference. I use this audio sparingly, because I have a C70 that I connect my XLR shotgun mic to. Any suggestions or comment are appreciated?
The channel routing I described in the video is taken directly from page 105 in the R5C's manual (PDF version). It's been my experience, that the manual is correct and the camera route signals as described. However, if you're seeing something different than that, you'd have to ask Canon why.
As for seeing a stereo track in Premiere... The only time the R5C records a stereo audio file is when it's in 2 channel AAC mode. In LPCM mode, the camera records 4 mono tracks and you have to tell you editing software to treat them as stereo. I haven't used Premiere for years, but I don't think it should be reorganizing the track structure, or presenting it any differently than it is in the files. So to that end, I'm not exactly sure what's going on there.
Also, as far as I know, Rode doesn't have any mics that implement Canon's multi-function shoe. Just putting any mic in the camera's hotshoe doesn't change the routing order or how it's connected. The mic/AIF (specifically Canon's DM-E1D mic, or Tascam's CA-XLR2d-C audio interface) must connect through the pins in the front of the hotshoe for it to be a multi-function shoe device and get routed that way.
@@PointsInFocus I looked back at the footage, and I was incorrect. I was looking at the C70 footage. The R5C footage does reflect what you reported. 1-2 are the 3.5" mic input, and 3-4 does seem to be the internal mic.
does it record automatically when I plug the external mic or do I need to press something in the camera menu? Thanks!!!
The only thing you'd have to do in the menus is set the recording levels. Otherwise, it will automatically start recording the external mic when it detects one is plugged in.
@@PointsInFocus Thank you for your fast reply!
how can i get three seperate audio inputs to record on three separate audio tracks? I have a saramonic LAV receiver with two transmitors, as well as a basic sennhieser shotgun mic. Will I have to record the two LAV mics as L and R on the same audio track and then separate them into individual audio tracks in post or is it possible to have them each record onto their own audio track and have the boom record onto a third since it defaults to creating 4 tracks anyway. Will a simple 3.5 cable splitter function if i plug both the receiver and shotgun mic into the same audio input or will it try to mix the audio inputs internally? I tried using the CKobal MX-1-V2 Two-Channel Mini Mixer with Shoe Bracket which seemed perfect for this problem, except that it did not work at all and couldn't even fasten to the top shoe securely enough for me to feel comfortable attaching mics or my monitor to it. Would love any suggestions, you are clearly an expert on this camera
I guess I could sell my boom mic and buy the canon brand one that works directly though the shoe, but is there a solution with the mic I currently have? or can it only record max 2 channels through the 3.5 Input regardless
I'm assuming that your Sarmonic wireless system outputs one mic puts each mid on each of the stereo channels. So one goes to left, one goes to right. If so, then you won't be able to use a simple passive cable to combine the output from that and your shotgun mic, you will need a mixer of some sort.
The best option, in my opinion, at lest if you're serious about good quality audio, would be to get a proper 3-6 channel audio recorder and use that to record all of your audio. Something like a SoundDevices MixPre-3 II or a Zoom F6 would be idea, but you can of course go with something less expensive. Run everything into that, and either a time code cable back to the R5C or an attenuated patch from the recorders line out so you have good sync sound on the camera. Then use the audio sync function in your NLE (Resolve/Premiere Pro, etc.) to sync the good sound up in post. This will give you the most flexibility, and best possible quality audio.
Barring that, you can get 2 more inputs for the R5C with a Tascam CA-XLR2d-C. This uses the multi-function shoe and provides a 24-bit pro level audio interface with 2 XLR/TRS combo jacks (with phantom power) and a 3.5mm (1/8") TRS unbalanced input jack; though you can only use one of the two at a time. You can use this in conjunction with the camera's 3.5mm mic in to record 4 channels independently. The CA-XLR2ds also have a mount for mic if you want to use a standard shotgun mic on camera.
As for selling your Sennheiser shotgun mic and replacing it with a Canon DM-E1D... Keep in mind you can't take the Canon off camera. There's no provision for the extending the multi-function shoe connection and there's no 3.5mm option on that mic. All things considered, I don't think that mic is a great solution for most users. It might be ideal for a journalist with an R3 that doesn't want any stray cables, but for everyone else it's quite limiting in the long run.
I’m starting to wonder if when the cinema guys got hold of the camera to modify it they didn’t just add a processor or piggyback their on board and said eff those other guys.
Is about right “C”= Complicated
C stands for "complicated"... LOL