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- granbergb (8386)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseGood buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
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Reviews (7)

Aug 23, 2022
Not the highly-rated, pre-charged Energizers
I mistakenly thought since these are made in Japan rather than China they are of the low self discharge variety. They are not and lose their charge quickly in storage. Apparently, what I should have purchased are the lower-capacity 2000mAh Energizers. Worse, even freshly charged they would only power my digital recorder for perhaps a sixth of the time a set of Panasonic Eneloops taken right from the package did.

Jan 16, 2020
Well worth the money
I'm an audio technician and upon receipt put this device through a series of tests. While it is not a 1:1 transformer and there is some signal lost (or gained) by inserting it in an audio line, the frequency response is very good. It's not down by much at the extremes of 20Hz and 20KHz and this is true for a wide range of load impedances, including 600 Ohms. Inside are two audio isolation transformers of ample size, which are offset to avoid crosstalk between channels. There are no resistors.
Jun 05, 2015
Cheap construction and unshielded cable.
2 of 2 found this helpful You get exactly what you pay for with this inexpensive, mostly-plastic microphone. The fidelity actually doesn't appear to be too bad, but there's absolutely no shielding in either the microphone or the cable. In fact, disassembly revealed that the latter uses very few strands of copper in each of the two conductors. I ended up using a better grade of cable in order to get rid of the audio hum. Both mike and cable use an atypical wiring of the XLR connector. However, the one in the microphone is easily removed for rewiring to put the output on pins 2 and 3 so it will work better with a professional-grade cable and balanced-input equipment. I did notice that this dynamic mike seemed to produce more background hiss in the preamps than some others I compared it to. Very odd.