I see where turning down the mic reduces the chance of feedback if that's all you do. It's adding the voltage/db's (however you want to measure it) back into the system (the loop) that befuddling me.
OK, try this; the key part of the loop is the acoustic link between the loudspeakers (the source of the bleed) and the microphone (the pickup of the bleed.) That is where the feedback loop actually exists; the feedback does not originate in the board or in the wires or anywhere else in the signal path; the real source is the dynamic between the speakers and the microphone.
So what we have in that dynamic is that on one side the volume out of the source does not change; the gain boost on the board is not boosting the overall volume coming out of the speaker, it remains the same. On the other side of the acoustic dynamic, the volume out of the pickup goes down, because the gain built into the mic goes down. The combiination of the same volume out of the speakers and the effective decreased sensitivity of the mic is a net decrease in the potential for feedback.
What's happening on the board beyond that is irrelevant to that key dynamic - other than the fact that is the gain settings on the board that ensure that the volume at the speakers remains constant.
It's no different than if we reversed the situation; if the gain/sensitivity on the mic did not change, but the volume out of the speakers were lowered, the chances for feedback would reduce equally. Feedback is not an intelligent being; it doesn't know the difference between a lower volume at the speaker and a lower volume at the mic, it only "knows" whether *the combination of the two* is enough to cause it.
Once again, it doesn't know whether the decreased volume out of the mic is because of a change in the mic's intrinsic gain on an omni with a gain control, or whether it's because of a cardioid being turned away from the speaker, or whether its because the volume out of the speakerhas been turned down. The end result in all three situations is the same; it's a decrease in the volume of the bleed going through the microphone, regardless of the cause of that decrease.
It's not that I'm not finding information on this both on the net or in my books, I'm not finding anything that supports what you are saying. Can you give me source that backs it?
My source that backs it is my 11+ years owning and using the exact microphone in question and using it on stage as well as in the studio, combined with my 31 years or so of education and experience in this field with microphones and recording in general.
I didn't have to read it in any source; it's basic common sense stuff. The only reason you're having a problem with it is because you don't like me as a source. Apparently if you read it from someone else, you'll believe it, but if you read it from me, you wont believe it.
G.