
bennychico11
...
A recent thread got me thinking...
How many people base the preamp they buy off of the microphone they use? It's generally recommended to compare the impedance on both preamp (input) and microphone (output) that you plan on using together. The theory is that an incorrect mismatch can cause havoc on your audio messing with the microphone frequency response...in other words, acting like a big EQ to the incoming signal.
The recommended input impedance of the preamp is 10x the amount of the microphone's output. This is a reason why some manufacturers are putting variable impedance knobs on their preamps.
Do people pay attention to this? Or is the actual sound of the preamp more important than how it messes with your audio?
Or is it both? When people sit there and complain about certain preamps and how they sound...are they giving a biased opinion because there happened to be an impedance mismatch between mic and preamp they listened to? Or are the electronic savvy people out there that can tell me the impedance causes only a slight difference in the resulting signal?
-B
How many people base the preamp they buy off of the microphone they use? It's generally recommended to compare the impedance on both preamp (input) and microphone (output) that you plan on using together. The theory is that an incorrect mismatch can cause havoc on your audio messing with the microphone frequency response...in other words, acting like a big EQ to the incoming signal.
The recommended input impedance of the preamp is 10x the amount of the microphone's output. This is a reason why some manufacturers are putting variable impedance knobs on their preamps.
Do people pay attention to this? Or is the actual sound of the preamp more important than how it messes with your audio?
Or is it both? When people sit there and complain about certain preamps and how they sound...are they giving a biased opinion because there happened to be an impedance mismatch between mic and preamp they listened to? Or are the electronic savvy people out there that can tell me the impedance causes only a slight difference in the resulting signal?
-B