Head to head

Audio-Technica BP40 vs Tula Mic

A side-by-side look at Audio-Technica BP40 and Tula Mic for podcasters: pricing, features, and where each one wins.

Audio-Technica BP40

Large-diaphragm dynamic with a hypercardioid pattern for demanding broadcast environments

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Tula Mic

A dual-capsule USB mic and standalone recorder that fits in your pocket

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At a glance

Audio-Technica BP40Tula Mic
Starting priceSee siteSee site
Free planNoNo
Free trialNoNo
Best forBroadcast and radio-style podcasters who want the noise rejection of a dynamic with more diaphragm surface than a standard moving coilPodcasters and field recorders who need one device for both studio USB recording and standalone portable capture

Key features

Audio-Technica BP40

  • Frequency response 50 Hz to 16 kHz
  • Large-diaphragm hypercardioid dynamic XLR, no phantom power required
  • 37mm moving-coil capsule on internal flexible suspension
  • Switchable 100 Hz low-frequency roll-off
  • Output impedance 450 ohms, weight 632 g
  • Deep null points at 120 and 240 degrees off-axis

Tula Mic

  • 16-bit / 48kHz resolution
  • USB-C connectivity
  • Dual cardioid and omnidirectional condenser capsules
  • 8GB internal storage for standalone recording
  • Built-in rechargeable battery (up to 12 hours recording)
  • Klevgrand Brusfri onboard noise reduction

Pros and cons

Audio-Technica BP40

Pros

  • Hypercardioid pattern provides exceptional off-axis rejection
  • Large diaphragm dynamics capture more detail than small-capsule alternatives
  • Internal mechanical shock isolation reduces stand vibration
  • No phantom power required

Cons

  • Hypercardioid sweet spot is narrow - off-axis coloration is significant
  • Heavy at 632 g - requires a sturdy boom arm
  • Needs a quality preamp with adequate gain for dynamic mic levels

Tula Mic

Pros

  • Only USB mic in class with built-in recorder and battery
  • Burr Brown op-amps deliver a clean, warm preamp character
  • Dual capsule (cardioid and omni) without pattern switching complexity
  • Pocket-sized for truly portable podcast recording

Cons

  • 16-bit/48kHz ceiling - not high-res audio
  • Premium price partly driven by portability premium
  • Requires firmware update for optimal performance on first use

The verdict

Choose Audio-Technica BP40 if

Broadcast and radio-style podcasters who want the noise rejection of a dynamic with more diaphragm surface than a standard moving coil.

The BP40 is unusual - it gives you the noise rejection and simplicity of a dynamic microphone with a capsule size closer to a studio condenser. The hypercardioid pattern is tighter than the SM7B's supercardioid, which is a serious advantage…

Read the full Audio-Technica BP40 review →

Choose Tula Mic if

Podcasters and field recorders who need one device for both studio USB recording and standalone portable capture.

The Tula Mic is genuinely unlike anything else in this category. The combination of a quality USB-C condenser with honest 12-hour standalone recording capability and real noise reduction processing in a pocket-sized form factor is a product design win. The…

Read the full Tula Mic review →

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