
mshilarious
Banned
Well, you have a pair of cheap mics you don't like, but presume that another cheap pair would be better? Just learn to use what you have, and save up the cash for a pair of Beyer MC930s* (I would buy MC910s because omni is better, but you probably don't agree). Otherwise you will be back here in six months asking us the same question again. I mean £200 + £125 = £325, another ~£200 and you'd have the MC930s. But you already spent the first £125? Well, don't do that again.
Here's a puzzle for you in the meantime: if you take a mic with no highs and 17dBA self-noise, and a mic with a tremendous amount of highs and 22dBA self-noise, and you apply, say, a first-order cut with -3dB point at 6kHz to equalize the frequency response of the two microphones, what is the resulting comparative noise? The A-weighting doesn't change a whole lot, just a little (due to the weighting factors applied), but how about your perception of noise? Or do the opposite, take your mics and boost the highs--I haven't seen a lot of EQs with boosts that work quite the same way as cuts, so you'll have to play with a high-shelf boost until you get a similar result. You'd want a boost of 3dB at 6kHz with a slope up to ~20dB at 20kHz.
Well that's all just for fun. MC930 = 16dBA, plus excellent high frequency response.
*For US people reading this post, I'd say Shure KSM141s instead, but those are too expensive in Europe. Although you get switchable patterns, so still worth the thought.
Here's a puzzle for you in the meantime: if you take a mic with no highs and 17dBA self-noise, and a mic with a tremendous amount of highs and 22dBA self-noise, and you apply, say, a first-order cut with -3dB point at 6kHz to equalize the frequency response of the two microphones, what is the resulting comparative noise? The A-weighting doesn't change a whole lot, just a little (due to the weighting factors applied), but how about your perception of noise? Or do the opposite, take your mics and boost the highs--I haven't seen a lot of EQs with boosts that work quite the same way as cuts, so you'll have to play with a high-shelf boost until you get a similar result. You'd want a boost of 3dB at 6kHz with a slope up to ~20dB at 20kHz.
Well that's all just for fun. MC930 = 16dBA, plus excellent high frequency response.
*For US people reading this post, I'd say Shure KSM141s instead, but those are too expensive in Europe. Although you get switchable patterns, so still worth the thought.