
squibble94
Nature of Force
Hey guys. I'm just curious as to how a mic's frequency response is determined. Anyone know?
Several possibilities:
- Right Way: Create known-flat acoustic signal by playing pink noise (or white noise, or sweeps) through a carefully calibrated speaker system in an anechoic chamber; put the mic in front of it; hook it up through a carefully calibrated preamp and AD converter to a spectrum analyzer (or, if you use sweeps, you could use a VU meter, which is simpler in some ways but perhaps less accurate).
- More Cludgy Way: If your acoustic source (or post-mic path) isn't quite so perfect but you do have another mic with flat (or at least known) frequency response, put each of them in front of a pretty-flat speaker in a pretty-uncolored room, analyze both of them, then calculate the frequency response of the mic you're measuring using the known response of the other mic and the measured differences.
- Marketing Way: Just copy the chart from somewhere else.
Curious how close the chart that comes with the mic typically is to their measured response?Not too surprising: if anyone does it the right way, it presumably should be Earthworks, since they make a fair number of the mics people use to measure the frequency response of everything else.
Hmm interesting. That's how I thought they did it, but it seems like too many variables come into play. Big margin of error there.