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#1
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(I'm hoping that this message will attach itself intelligently to the
thread which begain this past October ...) As I mentioned, I was able to con some friends in Germany into making detailed measurements on one of my Royer SF-1s (which was very recently checked over by Royer, incidentally). In the horizontal plane it does have a nearly ideal bidirectional pattern, while in the vertical plane it has a good pattern up below 8 kHz, by which point it has off-axis losses that distort its pickup pattern. This fits with what one would expect given the ribbon's shape--in the vertical, it's like a very large diaphragm while in the horizontal, it's like a tiny one. That's fine as long as people know about it. I wouldn't use this type of microphone laterally as the "S" mike in an M/S pair, but if its body is placed perpendicular to the sound source, it should offer really precise imaging capability. All in all the frequency response curves at all angles in the horizontal plane were smooth and very close to parallel with each other--but that's just another way of saying that its polar pattern was accurate. (Pedantic proposal: If anyone here doesn't see why those two facts relate in that way, it might be worth your trouble to think it through.) --Having lavished this praise on the microphone, let me point out a few problem areas. One is that this excellent response extended only to 11 or 12 kHz. Above that, there was a very noticeable rolloff. (It's hard to interpret Royer's published frequency response graphs since the graph "paper" isn't divided in any rational way--you sometimes can't tell what frequency is supposed to be what.) Another problem--potentially a big one--I mentioned in another thread: the output impedance of the SF-1 is 300 Ohms as stated--already rather high for a studio microphone--but this figure applies only in the midrange and above. At lower frequencies the output impedance rises until around the resonance point of the microphone (below 100 Hz), it significantly exceeds 1 kOhm. I don't know by exactly how much, since the measurement was literally off the chart by then. For a microphone to have so high an output impedance anywhere in the audio range is a rather severe problem in my view. It would definitely be preferable (for reasons of noise and interference as well as the avoidance of frequency-dependent losses) for the microphone to have a built-in preamp--assuming that the circuit provided a high enough impedance at low frequencies. --One of the main reasons I had for sending this microphone across the pond was to learn more about the characteristics of ribbon microphones in general. It is said, for example, that they don't have the off-axis high frequency peaks which are typical of condenser microphones. I was greatly interested to know if that was true, because I have heard that type of peakiness a fair amount, and I consider it a real threat to the kinds of stereo recording that I am interested in doing. I think it's fair to say that from the measurements I was shown, this particular ribbon microphone really is largely free of off-axis peaks. The frequency response was not extremely flat, but the polar pattern was highly uniform and that includes a "near-absence" of peaks. For a dynamic microphone these results were really excellent. However, I was also shown a set of curves which were run under identical conditions on a small-diaphragm, single-membrane bidirectional condenser microphone of a type that I often use--and the same thing could be said about its response--except that it went up to about 15 - 16 kHz, while that of the ribbon microphone rolled off above 11 - 12 kHz, as I've said. For me, this all confirmed the basis for the high opinion which ribbon aficionados have of good ribbons--but not the anti-condenser rhetoric which some of those same people emit at times as if by reflex. The rhetoric may apply with more fairness to large, dual-membrane condensers, which tend not to have such good polar patterns and some of which have peaky off-axis response (mixed in with a general drop-off of response to the sides--e.g. what a U 87 looks like at 90 degrees). But I wish that people wouldn't take those characteristics to be emblematic of all condenser microphones; it just isn't so. Also, the frequency response of the condenser microphone (a Schoeps--no surprise there) stayed within fewer dB of flat response all across the main part of the range, where the Royer has more bumping and tilting. Not narrow peaks--more like anatomical features which correspond to definite aspects of the ribbon mike's sonic character. Either type of response may well be considered desirable, but it's interesting to me that even the most highly touted ribbon microphones (consider for example the Coles 4038) are never very close to flat, as compared with the flattest condenser microphones. In fact I'm quite sure that whenever a Coles 4038 or a Royer is being tested for quality assurance purposes, a condenser microphone is what's being used as the standard of comparison. So some day before I die, I would really like to hear and try out the very flattest possible bidirectional ribbon microphone--or can they not be made any flatter than this? (I'm just asking.) It seems to me that until then, we're hearing big frequency response effects mixed in with whatever might be fundamentally different about "ribbon sound" versus "condenser sound"--and that's no way to reach reliable conclusions. |
#2
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David Satz wrote:
So some day before I die, I would really like to hear and try out the very flattest possible bidirectional ribbon microphone--or can they not be made any flatter than this? (I'm just asking.) It seems to me that until then, we're hearing big frequency response effects mixed in with whatever might be fundamentally different about "ribbon sound" versus "condenser sound"--and that's no way to reach reliable conclusions. They can be made much flatter. Try the RCA BK-11. The Coles 4040 is also worth checking out, although it has a presence peak. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#3
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