P
PureMutant
New member
I'm reading Modern Recording Techniques 7th ed. and do not fully grasp the relationship between capacitance and voltage in a condenser mic.
They say that capacitance is inversely proportional to voltage i.e. when the diaphragm moves inward the capacitance is high and the voltage low and vice versa. Moreover, inward diaphragm movement produces positive polarity and vice versa
This is what I do not understand:
How does the inward movement of the diaphragm produce a positive polarity when the voltage is low? I assumed this would be the other way around i.e. inward movement create a higher voltage and therefore positive polarity.
Can anybody shed light on this and help explain/fill in some gaps in my knowledge?
Thanks.
They say that capacitance is inversely proportional to voltage i.e. when the diaphragm moves inward the capacitance is high and the voltage low and vice versa. Moreover, inward diaphragm movement produces positive polarity and vice versa
This is what I do not understand:
How does the inward movement of the diaphragm produce a positive polarity when the voltage is low? I assumed this would be the other way around i.e. inward movement create a higher voltage and therefore positive polarity.
Can anybody shed light on this and help explain/fill in some gaps in my knowledge?
Thanks.