
bouldersoundguy
Well-known member
Well either...because if you're distance from mic2 to mic1 is increased three fold the distance of mic1 to source....then the distance of mic2 to source is automatically increased proportionally, and ends up being 4x what mic1 is to source.
You could move one mic laterally to change the distance between the mics without changing the distance to the source or the phase and level relationships (ignoring source radiation patterns). The distance between the mics is incidental.
The part in the end of the video shows how "phasey" the combination of both mics sounds when mic2 is less than 3:1 of mic1...there's just that point in the distance/time arrival where the phase issue is not as much of an issue.
It's the ratio of the two source-to-mic distances and the resulting signal levels that achieves separation. The distance between the mics is incidental.
Anyway...I have not to this day ever bothered to take out a ruler to measure when placing mics/mulitple mics....it's more of a by-eye and then what-sounds-best technique.![]()
I don't think I've ever actually used a ruler. Distance ratios on that order seem self evident to me.