
This is how you do it. I messed up, and didn't use enough tape, so in the last shot you can see its still sagging, so i went back and added some more after i stopped recording, so its better now. WHAT TO USE BESIDES TAPE: I had electrical tape lying around, but there are obviously other possible items you could use the wedge the mic. You could cut up stair tread (the rubber kind) and cut it to fit. Another option is tying rubber bands up into small balls, then cutting little pieces off the fit appropriately. If you find that anything else might work, comment and I'll add it to the list. This fix is 99.9% safe, and really can't harm your camera in anyway. The only thing to watch out for is when you wiggle off the black casing of the handle, be sure NOT TO PULL, only wiggle it. If you pull it off, there is a possibility of snapping the clips that hold it in place. Another thing to look out for getting the mic's ribbon cable stuck between the housing pieces if the rubber shoe. This could damage the cable and cause your camera to lose its sound. This will be more apparent when you are actually doing it for yourself. This was inspired by a text tutorial on SP by Harvey, but I kinda put a twist on it and made it a video for anyone who hates reading, like me haha. Hopes this helps anyone with that good 'ol vicious VX-1000 mic sag. Song: Throwing Fire - Ronald Jenkees
sony
vx1000
mic
sag
tutorial
video
how
to
do
and
it
will
work
word
mk1
skate
perception
bad
editing
cool
song
sorta
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