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#1
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hello everyone,
i'd like to "un-stupid" myself on something: lets say you have a flat recorded signal. then you apply an eq curve with a mixer to boost the treble. this will cause a phase-response somewhere in the waveform. when i look at condenser mics frequency plots, they very often have a huge treble bump in their response patterns. does this mean the mics are incurring this same sort of phase response as a boosting the treble on a mixer? i'm thinking the answer is "no"... which means you kind of get "free" treble boost from a condenser mic without the phase issues that a mixer eq boost would induce. so what's the right answer? |
#3
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On Sat, 08 Jan 2005 07:04:21 GMT, Chris Hornbeck
wrote: The right answer to your question is "no" , Re-reading through this crap, actually the answer is "yes". I think; it's late; who cares; sorry; night. Chris Hornbeck |
#4
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![]() lets say you have a flat recorded signal. then you apply an eq curve with a mixer to boost the treble. this will cause a phase-response somewhere in the waveform. when i look at condenser mics frequency plots, they very often have a huge treble bump in their response patterns. does this mean the mics are incurring this same sort of phase response as a boosting the treble on a mixer? i'm thinking the answer is "no"... which means you kind of get "free" treble boost from a condenser mic without the phase issues that a mixer eq boost would induce. so what's the right answer? ** With one exception - the phase response of a device always follows the frequency response, no matter what mechanism ( mechanical or electrical) is causing the frequency response to vary. The one exception is something called an "all pass filter" which varies phase while marinating a flat frequency response - not very common circuits in audio systems. .............. Phil |
#6
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"Phil Allison" wrote in message
** With one exception - the phase response of a device always follows the frequency response, no matter what mechanism ( mechanical or electrical) is causing the frequency response to vary. This is the so-called minimum phase characteristic. Electrical filters and analog audio electronics are minimum phase as, a rule. Notable exceptions exist, such as delay lines (reverb boxes). The one exception is something called an "all pass filter" which varies phase while marinating a flat frequency response - not very common circuits in audio systems. Ironically, most directional microphones and virtually all multi-driver speakers have all-pass, non-minimum phase response. So, getting back to the OP: lets say you have a flat recorded signal. then you apply an eq curve with a mixer to boost the treble. this will cause a phase-response somewhere in the waveform. True, unless you use a non-minimum phase eq which is now not uncommon in DAW software. A case in point would be the FFT filter in Audition. Most other Audition equalizers are minimum-phase, or approximately so. when i look at condenser mics frequency plots, they very often have a huge treble bump in their response patterns. does this mean the mics are incurring this same sort of phase response as a boosting the treble on a mixer? Probably, but not certainly. Omnidirectional mics tend to be minimum phase, and therefore their frequency response and phase response are tied together in a similar fashion as an electrical equalizer circuit. The formal name for this connection is called the Hibert transform. OTOH, cardioid mics operate on the basis of the mixing of sound from two or more different locations that are separated by acoustical delays. It's not reasonable to expect cardioid and other directional mics to be minimum phase at all frequencies. IOW, the phase shift of directional microphones can be all over the place. i'm thinking the answer is "no"... which means you kind of get "free" treble boost from a condenser mic without the phase issues that a mixer eq boost would induce. No, there is no free lunch in audio. However, the phase shift due to equalization is not necessarily a problem. The ear is relatively insensitive to phase shift that is equally applied to both channels. A lot of the real-world problems with phase shift in the recording process are due to different phase shifts that are applied to different sources that are mixed together. If phase shift was really that much of a problem, we wouldn't be able to stand to listen to loudspeakers, and in rooms. so what's the right answer? Forget about free lunches in audio. Don't be paranoid about using equalization. But do exercise appropriate care, particularly when mixing different versions of the same basic musical source. |
#7
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"Arny Krueger"
"Phil Allison" ** With one exception - the phase response of a device always follows the frequency response, no matter what mechanism ( mechanical or electrical) is causing the frequency response to vary. This is the so-called minimum phase characteristic. ** Don't tell anybody Arny - but that term just means an absence of all pass filters. Electrical filters and analog audio electronics are minimum phase as, a rule. ** Yep Notable exceptions exist, such as delay lines (reverb boxes). ** Time delay devices are all pass filters. The one exception is something called an "all pass filter" which varies phase while marinating a flat frequency response - not very common circuits in audio systems. Ironically, most directional microphones and virtually all multi-driver speakers have all-pass, non-minimum phase response. ** But Arny is too coy to say what that is due to. So, getting back to the OP: ** Having screwed over my post with his asinine mumbo jumbo. lets say you have a flat recorded signal. then you apply an eq curve with a mixer to boost the treble. this will cause a phase-response somewhere in the waveform. True, unless you use a non-minimum phase eq which is now not uncommon in DAW software. A case in point would be the FFT filter in Audition. Most other Audition equalizers are minimum-phase, or approximately so. ** The point is lost in the over use of unnecessary jargon. IOW More of Kreuger's mumbo jumbo. when i look at condenser mics frequency plots, they very often have a huge treble bump in their response patterns. does this mean the mics are incurring this same sort of phase response as a boosting the treble on a mixer? Probably, but not certainly. Omnidirectional mics tend to be minimum phase, and therefore their frequency response and phase response are tied together in a similar fashion as an electrical equalizer circuit. The formal name for this connection is called the Hibert transform. ** Arny has just swallowed whole some load of BS on the net. Can't even spell Hilbert either. OTOH, cardioid mics operate on the basis of the mixing of sound from two or more different locations that are separated by acoustical delays. It's not reasonable to expect cardioid and other directional mics to be minimum phase at all frequencies. IOW, the phase shift of directional microphones can be all over the place. ** The throw away "all over the place" is not a helpful summary. More of Kreuger's gobbledegook. i'm thinking the answer is "no"... which means you kind of get "free" treble boost from a condenser mic without the phase issues that a mixer eq boost would induce. No, there is no free lunch in audio. ** Or much good free advice. ................ Phil |
#8
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wrote:
i'd like to "un-stupid" myself on something: lets say you have a flat recorded signal. then you apply an eq curve with a mixer to boost the treble. this will cause a phase-response somewhere in the waveform. If your EQ is an analogue IIR filter. And, if it's a minimum phase system, which most analogue EQ networks are, you can predict the phase response from the slope and frequency of the filter. when i look at condenser mics frequency plots, they very often have a huge treble bump in their response patterns. does this mean the mics are incurring this same sort of phase response as a boosting the treble on a mixer? Depends on what causes it. Most of the microphone problems you see are going to be minimum phase, but not all of them are. And it gets more complicated, because I suspect you have never seen an accurate microphone response plot. The plots that manufacturers provide are VERY heavily smoothed and don't have any real detail, so you miss out on all of the narrower resonance problems. I'M THinking the answer is "no"... which means you kind of get "free" treble boost from a condenser mic without the phase issues that a mixer eq boost would induce. What do you mean by "phase issues?" The phase shift that you get with an equalizer is good and useful for the most part. You might want to play around with a digital FIR filter some time, which has no group delay. It's weird to work with, but sometimes useful. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#9
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thanks for all the responses.
let me re-ask the question in a simpler way: what causes a single-diaphragm cardioid condenser mic to have a huge frequency bump around 10K? what i'm getting at is this: if you *know* you want a bright, hyped sound, maybe a bright mic will give you that without the phase-shift that happens whan applying a normal eq. |
#10
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thanks Arny,
that's a good point about how aggregating weird combinations of eq in a mix can cause bad results. |
#11
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#12
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... thanks for all the responses. let me re-ask the question in a simpler way: what causes a single-diaphragm cardioid condenser mic to have a huge frequency bump around 10K? what i'm getting at is this: if you *know* you want a bright, hyped sound, maybe a bright mic will give you that without the phase-shift that happens whan applying a normal eq. which condenser mic? most of the pro grade mics that i'm am familiar with are very flat over their operating range. |
#13
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wrote:
what causes a single-diaphragm cardioid condenser mic to have a huge frequency bump around 10K? Marketing. Vendors think people want presence peaks, so they build them into microphones. You can get plenty of cardioid condensers out there that have no presence hump and no spikiness in the top octave. They are not really pushed to the project studio crowd, though. what i'm getting at is this: if you *know* you want a bright, hyped sound, maybe a bright mic will give you that without the phase-shift that happens whan applying a normal eq. No, you get the same phase shift, or somewhat different phase shift. But I don't see anything wrong with phase shift. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#14
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DeserTBoB wrote:
On 8 Jan 2005 08:29:19 -0800, wrote: what i'm getting at is this: if you *know* you want a bright, hyped sound, maybe a bright mic will give you that without the phase-shift that happens whan applying a normal eq. snip Go back and re-read Allison. He's quite correct on this subject. Phase shift follows freq response deviations, and microphones are no exception. Microphones CAN be an exception. For the most part, you will never see electronics that aren't minimum phase unless they're specifically designed not to be. But a lot of mechanical and acoustical systems aren't minimum phase. You'll find microphones aren't always, especially when you talk about narrowband body resonances. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#15
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Hi, generic. A condenser microphone can have a high-frequency response
peak due to the acoustical properties of the capsule and capsule head arrangement (underdamped resonance), electrical equalization within the microphone's circuitry, or perhaps some combination of the two. Resonances that cause response peaks also cause deviations from linear phase around the same frequencies, and all common analog peaking (EQ) circuits do likewise. So if you take a "peaky" microphone and equalize its peak away, you most likely are smoothing its phase response at the same time. Of course not every condenser microphone has a high-frequency peak, let alone a huge one, or a peak that's around the particular frequency range that you mentioned. If any high frequency peak exists, it's generally because the manufacturer hopes that artificial brightness will increase sales ("This microphone has enormous 'resolution', an 'open' sound, and will really make your vocals 'cut through' a mix."). Some condenser microphones are essentially ruler-flat across the entire audio band, so the condenser principle itself is definitely not the cause; measurement microphones, as you probably know, are generally condensers. --best regards |
#16
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wrote:
what i'm getting at is this: if you *know* you want a bright, hyped sound, maybe a bright mic will give you that without the phase-shift that happens whan applying a normal eq. I think you're worrying overly much about the phase shift from EQ. Yes, by choosing an appropriate mic and putting in the right spot you may obtain the desired results directly without further manipulation. One catch is that an EQ offers you many different response curves, while a given mic, on-axis, at a given distance from the source, gives you one response curve. -- ha "If you get one noxious piece of **** device in your signal chain, you will get a bad result and there is no magic cure that will undo this." Scott Dorsey |
#17
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David Satz wrote:
("This microphone has enormous 'resolution', an 'open' sound, and will really make your vocals 'cut through' a mix."). "Like a blunt axe through oatmeal!!" -- ha |
#18
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![]() Scott Dorsey wrote: Depends on what causes it. Most of the microphone problems you see are going to be minimum phase, but not all of them are. Right. It's mixed phase if they are directional because pure delay is contained in the transfer function. I hate to talk above Phil's head but it is often necessasary. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#19
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#20
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![]() let me re-ask the question in a simpler way: what causes a single-diaphragm cardioid condenser mic to have a huge frequency bump around 10K? ** When the wavelength of a sound is comparable to the diameter of the microphone capsule there is an acoustic pressure doubling effect that increases the output by up to 6 dB. The larger the mic capsule the lower the frequency where this effect starts. A 10kHz sound has a wavelength in air of 34 mm. With most dynamic mics the effect is exploited to extend the frequency range - with condensers it produces a rising response at some high frequency if nothing is done to counteract it. Mics for test and measurement are usually made very small to put this effect out of the audible range. ............... Phil |
#21
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![]() "Bob Cain" Scott Dorsey wrote: Depends on what causes it. Most of the microphone problems you see are going to be minimum phase, but not all of them are. Right. It's mixed phase if they are directional because pure delay is contained in the transfer function. I hate to talk above Phil's head but it is often necessasary. ** You are not likely to be talking over *anyone's head* while using your arse as the source of speech. Sound waves arriving from the rear of a cardioid mic and entering the ports are delayed by tiny amount ( circa 20 - 40 microseconds) to equalise the path lengths with waves travelling around the outside of the capsule. Hence the pressures are exactly in phase on both sides of the diaphragm and there is no output. Since the rear path to the diaphragm is obstructed short wavelengths cannot pass as easily as lower ones do - hence the cancellation effect fails at higher audio frequencies. Cardioids do still manage around 10 dB front to back ratio at 10 kHz - but then so too do many omnis ! However, for sound waves arriving *on axis* the time delay to reach the rear of the diaphragm is greater by that same tiny amount which increases the output. But at high audio frequencies the delayed wave loses amplitude at the diaphragm and the mic returns to mostly omni operation. A rising high frequency response will be simply due to the usual pressure doubling effect as wavelength approaches the diameter of the diaphragm and/or the nature of the diaphragm itself. The rear path time delay is simply not involved and so response and phase will closely follow. This is an easy to follow explanation of the cardioid mic principle. http://www.prosoundweb.com/install/s...ioidmics.shtml ............ Phil |
#22
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![]() Phil Allison wrote: This is an easy to follow explanation of the cardioid mic principle. http://www.prosoundweb.com/install/s...ioidmics.shtml Here's a couple not quite so easy: http://www.arcanemethods.com/single_diaphragm_paper.pdf http://www.arcanemethods.com/dual_diaphragm_paper.pdf These are linked without permission because the author has disappeared to the best of my ability to determine. Bob -- "Things should be described as simply as possible, but no simpler." A. Einstein |
#23
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![]() "Bob Cain" Phil Allison wrote: This is an easy to follow explanation of the cardioid mic principle. http://www.prosoundweb.com/install/s...ioidmics.shtml Here's a couple not quite so easy: ** Seeing as you snipped my whole post and ignored my URL - you know where to shove yours . Same smelly windy place all your ideas emanate from . ................... Phil |
#24
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David Satz wrote:
Hi, generic. A condenser microphone can have a high-frequency response peak due to the acoustical properties of the capsule and capsule head arrangement (underdamped resonance), electrical equalization within the microphone's circuitry, or perhaps some combination of the two. The general mechanism the question is about is the inverse of the baffle diffraction step that occurs with loudspeakers, ie. a pressure build up in front of the diaphragm and/or mic housing. The parameter that matters is size of mic compared to wavelength of sound. Generally the on axis response or the off axis response can be made linear, but not both. Special design tricks, ie. the pointed nose of one of the special grids for the dpa ommis can be used to make both identical, but strictly speaking, very strictly, not totally and fully linear. All things equal, to whatever degree they may be, smaller mics are more likely to have a linear high end than larger mics unless a presence boost is applied via acoustic resonance. Resonances that cause response peaks also cause deviations from linear phase around the same frequencies, and all common analog peaking (EQ) circuits do likewise. So if you take a "peaky" microphone and equalize its peak away, you most likely are smoothing its phase response at the same time. Yes. EQ generally compensates also phase response to at least some extent. Issues that are caused by narrow mechanical and/or acoustic resonances ARE however problematic, especially if delayed resonance is involved. The issues are quite the same for mics as they are for loudspeakers, including that cabinet design is a part of the acoustic design and not just cosmetics. The largest single problem with phase response is that those that write hifi magazines seem to fail to comprehend that proper EQ generally is minimum phase EQ and gets the phase if not right, then at least less wrong when applied. Which is why one of the things to listen for when EQ-ing by ear is whether the room rendering is improved. Kind regards Peter Larsen -- ******************************************* * My site is at: http://www.muyiovatki.dk * ******************************************* |
#25
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hank alrich wrote:
David Satz wrote: ("This microphone has enormous 'resolution', an 'open' sound, and will really make your vocals 'cut through' a mix."). "Like a blunt axe through oatmeal!!" I have a microphone sitting on the bench right now which fits this description perfectly. The frequency response plot looks like a hedgehog centered around 6 KC or so. I sent a copy of the plot to the "manufacturer" to ask if it was really supposed to be this way, and I was told basically that nobody had ever done a narrowband plot on those mikes... --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#26
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Scott Dorsey wrote:
hank alrich wrote: David Satz wrote: ("This microphone has enormous 'resolution', an 'open' sound, and will really make your vocals 'cut through' a mix."). "Like a blunt axe through oatmeal!!" I have a microphone sitting on the bench right now which fits this description perfectly. The frequency response plot looks like a hedgehog centered around 6 KC or so. I sent a copy of the plot to the "manufacturer" to ask if it was really supposed to be this way, and I was told basically that nobody had ever done a narrowband plot on those mikes... --scott 6 KC? KC??? Scott!! Your age is showing! |
#27
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"Phil Allison" wrote in
: "Bob Cain" Phil Allison wrote: This is an easy to follow explanation of the cardioid mic principle. http://www.prosoundweb.com/install/s...cardioidmics.s html Here's a couple not quite so easy: ** Seeing as you snipped my whole post and ignored my URL - you know where to shove yours . Same smelly windy place all your ideas emanate from . .................. Phil Correct, except on one important point. Bob Cain doesn't have ideas. He only has opinions, and most of them are wrong. |
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