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"Mr.T" MrT@home wrote in message
u "Arny Krueger" wrote in message . .. No the outputs of a stereo mic are *never* perfectly aligned because a stereo mic must have two mic elements and they can't occupy the same space. That's the whole point. No, what we call stereo mics are only approximations of ideal stereo microphones. If two identical mics *did* occupy the same space, you would simply get mono. Surely not what is wanted. OTOH, a M/S pair occupying the same space may be an improvement. Later on in your post talk your way out of this conundrum, so there's no need for me to correct you. Stereo mics are composed of two elements, and of course the elements may be different kinds of mics or mics oriented at different angles. As a practical matter they cannot occupy the same space either totally or partially. The fact that they are always displaced from each other in one or more planes means that they are never perfectly time-aligned in all planes. Since sound is picked up in a wide variety of planes, the mics response is never perfectly time-aligned. It would seem you haven't with *analog* tape recordings though. Wrong again. Ironically, the tracks of analog tape recordings are never *exactly* time aligned due to the fact that analog tape azimuth is rarely if ever perfect, or perfectly stable. |
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