Behringer C-2 Pair or NADY CM90's

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GOODLAND

GOODLAND

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OK, I have no intention of buying either of these mikes. I just want to know which one is better seeing as Behringer is charging only $50 (cheepest I have ever seen) for a pair of pencil condensers and it would be funny if they were anywhere close to being any good. Just wanted to through the question out there.
 
I don't know, but these days you can get great mics for under $100 (no matter what the hardcore gear heads say) so if on a budget I'd snatch a pair up. I'm sure they are useable. Every Behringer product I have ever used have bettered my expectations. BTW I'm not a cheap gear guy, I have an assortment of intruments and recording gear form cheap to fairly expensive and I use just about all of it with good results.
 
GOODLAND said:
Thanks for the response.
Anyone else?

I have a pair of CM90s. They work well for drum overheads, IMHO. They're probably a bit too bright for more general purpose stuff---say concert recording---but they do quite well for sizzling cymbals.
 
It would be pretty crazy if the C-2's were better than the CM90's seeing as they are half the price. :eek:
 
GOODLAND said:
It would be pretty crazy if the C-2's were better than the CM90's seeing as they are half the price. :eek:

Yikes! I can't imagine that they don't suck for $25 apiece. It's hard enough to find a dynamic that doesn't suck for $25....
 
dgatwood said:
Yikes! I can't imagine that they don't suck for $25 apiece. It's hard enough to find a dynamic that doesn't suck for $25....

I know, but these are brand new from behringer and the CM90's have been out for a while. Who knows?
 
Behringers

I got a pair of the Behringers.

This was recorded ONLY with the Behringer C2s. That means that EVERY track was an XY pair of Behringer C2 mics through a Studiomaster Diamond mixer. No they don't have the same resolution as the higher end mics, and a well-trained ear can pick out the bright high end and grainy mids.

Plains On The Brains

It's improv'd. I did all of the instruments. If you can imagine it slowed down a little bit with strings & woodwinds stacatto it actually could be a classical tune.
 
The stereo bar that comes with the c-2's is worth about as much as the mics themselves. lol. I bought a pair to use for extra tom mics. I did a bunch of tests comparing them to a 57 on different sized toms. The drummer I'm recording has a rediculous sized 13 piece kit! I got these with the 6" and 8" concert toms in mind. They work well for that application, and didn't hurt my wallet. Micing inside the single headed toms (pad engaged on the c-2's) they picked up more of the lower overtones from these tiny toms than a 57 (likely more proximity effect) I would say they have a much slower response than the 57. The 57 and the c2's were very different on the small toms. I tried them on a 10" and 12" rack tom (micing about 1" above and 1" inside the top head pointing to the middle) The tone between the c-2 and a 57 was very similar, listening blind it was sometimes hard to tell which was which. The 57 captured the attack a little better and seemed more open, it was very close though. The 57 was much better at rejecting the other parts of the kit. The bleed on the c-2's from the cymbals wasen't pretty. Stuck inside of a single headed tom shell, this isn't as much of a problem. The c-2's are pretty noisey, not a big deal in close micing applications. I also tried one on hi-hat - absolulty horrible! Haven't tried them on other instruments. I also have a pair of 603's and Oktava MC-012's. If I get around to it, I'll do a shootout, but dunno if I'll have time.
 
You have to look more closely than otherwise when the price of a mike is the same as a tank of petrol. I bought a pair of behringer c2s for the hell of it, because they were so cheap.

I put them up against NT5s. There was a difference but, for the price, they prepresent great value for money. For someone atarting out, or for having a couple of emergency spares, you can't go wrong.
 
lol what im scared about is them being really noisy.. cause i currently have a Behringer C-1 LDC Condenser and whenever I turn on that little sucker the Noise or hum increases like 5DB! LOL from a noise floor of -45 it becomes around -40 to -38 LOL..
 
The C2 is way too noisy for acoustic guitar work and sounds brittle as well. Good long discussion about modding them over at The Lab:
http://www.prodigy-pro.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=11546&highlight=behringer

Consensus was this electret (not externally polarized) mic is limited by its capsule and not worth working on.

The modded MXL 603 is still the world beater for an inexpensive LDC. But damn, that's a whole $200 / pair ;)

But the MXL 603 / 2001 "Anniversary Special" for $99 is a great DIY deal - the 2001 is great for building the Royer tube mod into.
 
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