About
All feedback (49)
- qqitstore (1891)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseGreat communication. A pleasure to do business with.
- *****- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchase--
- shopuniquely (493)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseHope to deal with you again. Thank you.
- allstateus (910013)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseThanks for buying a SquareTrade warranty. Call 877-WARRANTY if you need help!
- lamitie_store (1700)- Feedback left by buyer.Past yearVerified purchaseExcellent customer! highly recommended. Thank you so much☺️
- best4best-4u (825)- Feedback left by buyer.Past yearVerified purchasethank yu for your order, hope to see you here again ;)
Reviews (4)
Sep 10, 2012
AT8035 is a better shotgun mic value than the $1000 Sennheiser 416
1 of 1 found this helpful Although the proper name of this mic doesn't not include the word "cable," make no mistake: It's one heck of a great mic. It's an ideal replacement for the Sennheiser 416 shotgun mic, so popular for sound stages, location shoots and voiceovers in Hollywood, but at 1/4th the price. Buy an AT8035 or its forerunner, the 835b (no difference that I can hear). You'll be glad you did.

May 17, 2016
THE BEST MIC FOR VOICEOVERS. EVER.
4 of 4 found this helpful This little-known and now unfortunately discontinued microphone is, in a word, AWESOME for voice work. It is HUGE and heavy...it won't fit in your standard shock mount, and needs its own $50 model. Somehow, its heavy weight translates into a "heavyweight" sound, giving my midrange/tenor voice more power and punch than any other mic I've ever used.
Have you been on a quest for that "Voice of God" sound on your voiceover work? Run this through a BBE Sonic Maximizer and stand back. It'll shake the walls. I own several RCA 77DX ribbon mics, famed for their big, bold, rich sound. This even beats them. Forget your wimply TLM103 or 102. This BIG DOG will eat those for lunch. It has the expansive depth of the original, German-tube Neumann U47 (think: Sinatra, Nat Cole, Dean Martin at Capitol Records).
I suggest one of these for every voiceover project home studio. Music studios should own a pair (some great studios do.) Apparently, Sterling (a house brand of Guitar Cener/Musicians Friend) pulled out all the stops in making this their grandest entry into mic manufacturing. It sold at an MSRP of $1K. Too unknown to command a price that high (pitting it directly against the big names like Neumann), and too big and heavy for weak modern mic stands, it didn't find enough acceptance, I guess. Too bad. I also own a little brother of this mic, the Sterling ST-51. That's easily the best value on the market today, and a great mic in its own right at $100. It sounds big, too.
So now, when somebody says "What's the best voiceover mic you've used in your 50+ year career?" I have an easy answer: my Sterling ST77. It produces the fat, full, clean and powerful sound that I've tried to recapture from the 1960's, when 50,000 watt "flamethrower" stations like WABC Musicradio thundered across the land. If you're old enough to remember just how HUGE the voices sounded on vintage, "all-tubes" AM radio, then plug this bad boy into a good vocal processor, and enjoy the re-birth of that glorious classic sound! (No tubes needed!) If you see an ST77 for sale, don't hesitate. Grab this rare treasure while you can!

Jan 02, 2021
EXCELLENT VALUE! A STURDY, WELL-MADE TABLE AT A BARGAIN PRICE!
I was concerned that such a low-priced massage table would be well-made, but took a chance. Fortunately, it's a fine, sturdy table! Easy to set-up, too. You can purchase with confidence.