
HyperX 519T2AA SoloCast USB Condenser Gaming Microphone - White Renewed
Studio-grade 24-bit/96kHz cardioid capture in a plug-and-play USB-C body — clean signal, zero driver overhead, and a tap-to-mute sensor built for live broadcast.
*Price sourced from Amazon.com. Last updated:Jul 14, 2026.Price and availability are subject to change.
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Overview
Key Features
Plug N Play audio recording with USB-C connection: Get quality audio recordings with this easy-to-use USB condenser microphone. The cardioid polar pattern is most sensitive to sound sources in front of the microphone, and reduces background noise.
Hi-Res 24-bit/96 kHz recording: SoloCast supports a high, studio-level bit depth and sampling rate.
Tap-to-Mute sensor with LED status indicator: Simply tap the top of the mic to mute, and the easy-to-see LED indicator lets you spot whether or not you’re broadcasting.
Flexible, adjustable stand: The easy-to-position stand swivels to support a variety of setups. You can even fit it under a monitor if your setup is tight on space.
Boom arm and mic stand threading: Versatile built-in mount adapter fits 3/8-inch and 5/8-inch threads, making it compatible with most mic stands or boom arms.
Specifications
Pros & Cons
👍 Pros
- 24-bit/96kHz capture resolves vocal transients cleanly, resulting in recordings that hold up well under compression in post without introducing digital harshness.
- The cardioid polar pattern provides rear and side rejection that keeps mechanical keyboard and fan noise from dominating a live or recorded signal at normal working distances.
- USB-C bus power and class-compliant audio mean zero driver overhead — works on Mac, PC, PS4, PS5, and any USB-C host without software installation.
- The tap-to-mute sensor with LED indicator provides faster, more reliable live muting than reaching for a DAW or OS volume control during a session.
- The integrated 3/8-inch and 5/8-inch thread adapter eliminates the need for a separate adapter when moving the mic between stand types.
👎 Cons
- As a cardioid condenser, the SoloCast's self-noise floor, while adequate for voice, is not competitive with XLR studio condensers in the same price range — high-gain acoustic instrument recording will reveal more noise than a dedicated interface-driven capsule.
- There is no physical gain control on the body; input level must be managed entirely through OS or software settings, which adds a workflow step when switching between sources or gain-heavy environments.
- The flexible desk stand, while convenient, positions the capsule closer to desk-reflected sound than a properly positioned boom arm — vibration isolation is minimal at the stand contact points.
- The renewed unit condition means cosmetic wear is possible, and the internal capsule's history is unknown — consistent long-term performance cannot be guaranteed to match a new unit.
- No onboard headphone monitoring output means zero-latency monitoring of your own voice is not available without a separate interface.