512 Audio Skylight review: camera-friendly mic excels with spoken word, faces stiff competition

With Skylight, 512 Audio goes up against some well-established alternatives, but how does this creator-centric condenser compare?

512 audio skylight
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Review Overview

Our rating

7

Our verdict

Good sounding mic
Emphasises low-mids for enhancing speech
Works well on other instruments too
Great build quality and on-camera look

Low-cut switch would be welcome
Included pop shield does not eliminate heavy plosives

Price £189.99/$199.99
Contact 512 Audio

512 Audio’s parent company, Warm Audio, is best known for recreating classic hardware. It’s produced rack gear, guitar pedals and mics all inspired by legendary studio gear. Their Neumann-inspired WA-87 even earned an MT Choice Award in February. However, where Warm Audio focuses on recording musicians and producers, the new 512 Audio sub-brand focuses on a different audience: video and podcast creators.

The first product under the microscope here is their first large-diaphragm condenser mic, the Skylight. This great-sounding, sturdily built mic can cover a wide range of tasks, standing up easily against the competition in this price bracket.

512 Audio tuned the Skylight for spoken word and singing, so we’re comparing its performance against two significant competitors in this price band – the Rode NT-1a and the SE Electronics 2200a – and it compares favourably.

All three mics were recorded in an isolation booth with the same setup through an Audient iD22. The only setup difference was that we used the Skylight’s included pop shield – a well-built metal mesh design that attaches easily – and a generic type on the other two mics.

The Skylight has a thick sound – there’s a boost in the low-mids around 500Hz compared to the competition and noticeably more than the Rode. However, the upper mids don’t suffer as a result of this. The Skylight allows the quality of the diction to be easily understood with speech and sung vocals even when embedded in a mix.

512 Audio Skylight

The mic’s low-mid boost makes sense for creators because it gives depth to speech. It makes voices sound full-bodied so it’s a fine choice for recording podcasts and voiceovers.

Although the Skylight is designed to be a vocal mic, it is likely that people who are recording vocals are going to want to record other things as well (at least occasionally) so it’s worth hearing how the mic holds up capturing an acoustic guitar.

The Skylight performs excellently here, and the more pronounced low frequencies capture the natural sound of the acoustic guitar more accurately than the other mics. By contrast, the Rode sounds too high-mid focused which left the guitar sounding thin.

512 Audio Skylight

Summary

The Skylight is a lovely-sounding mic for the price and regardless of 512’s focus on voice – the mic capably captures a range of sounds. The included pop shield struggled to prevent heavy plosives, so it’d be worth using an alternative pop shield positioned a little further away from the capsule when recording louder vocals.

Key Features

  • Large diaphragm condenser
  • Metal mesh pop shield and shockmount included
  • Tuned for sung vocals and spoken word
  • 34mm condenser capsule
  • Cardioid pickup pattern
  • Frequency response: 20Hz – 20kHz
  • Dimensions: 202mm x 55.5mm
  • Weight: 1kg
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