Condenser & Dynamic Mics [message #71743] |
Tue, 13 March 2012 15:56 |
Nymeria
Messages: 508 Registered: April 2011
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Illuminati (1st Degree) |
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What do you like to use condenser mics for, and when do you prefer dynamic mics? Do you use one type more than the other and why?
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Re: Condenser & Dynamic Mics [message #71995 is a reply to message #71743] |
Wed, 04 April 2012 00:15 |
Thermionic
Messages: 208 Registered: May 2009
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Master |
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CONDENSER MICS:
Small diaphragm condenser - Overhead cymbal mics/drum ambience, recording acoustic guitar as the mic used over the 12th fret in a two-mic pair.
Large diaphragm condenser - Recording of vocals, acoustic stringed instruments, horns, and as the ambience mic when recording a guitar amp.
DYNAMIC MICS:
Diaphragm-type - Live vocals, live and recorded drums, live micing of guitar amps, horns, and acoustic stringed instruments.
Ribbon-type: Pretty much studio-only; certain very high soprano vocals, and direct micing of guitar amps. Also works great for recording mandolin and acoustic guitar in conjunction with a cardioid pattern large diaphragm condenser, in a stereo micing setup called a "mid-side pair." That is, if the room acoustics are really top-notch.
The right tool for the particular job depends on what you're needing to achieve with what you're micing. Small diaphragm condensers are very sensitive, fast, and uncolored, hence they're extremely detailed and accurate. But, that also means they tend to sound harsh and spikey when recording very bright or brash sounds. OTOH, large diaphragm condensers are smoother and warmer sounding than small diaphragm condensers, but also less detailed and airy sounding.
The low sensitivity and high off-axis rejection of unwanted sound sources makes dynamic mics the undisputed kings of live sound duty. For the same reasons (plus others), they also rule for micing drums in the studio.
Ribbon mics are slow and colored sounding, and they don't reproduce the microdynamics and complex higher harmonics of many instruments nearly as well as condenser mics. However, they sound very warm and liquidy smooth, which greatly reduces the brittle, glassy "edginess" of harsh and/or bright instruments like the trumpet, soprano sax, violin, certain guitar/amplifier combinations, very high soprano register female vocals, etc.
Thermionic
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Re: Condenser & Dynamic Mics [message #72050 is a reply to message #72005] |
Sat, 07 April 2012 22:15 |
Thermionic
Messages: 208 Registered: May 2009
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Master |
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Bill Wassilak wrote on Wed, 04 April 2012 16:05 |
I'll never use a ribbon mic for live sound again in my book, I've even had some ribbon mic's if you drop them they wouldn't work anymore.
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Bill hit upon a true gold nugget of wisdom here, for anyone who may ever use a ribbon mic. Whatever you do, DO NOT DROP IT! Many times, it won't survive.
Another thing to remember is to make double, triple, quadruple, quintuple sure (then check 3 or 4 more times) that your phantom power is off before you plug the mic in. Phantom power will toast a ribbon mic.
Thermionic
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