D
dres
New member
Just a note to warn people about variations in the quality of some microphones.
A few years ago I scrapped enough dollars together to get an NT1 when they first came out. At the time I thought it was wonderful and 2 years later purchased another one so I could do stereo recordings. Funny thing was when I tried the second NT1 I noticed is sounded hotter and had had more top end response. Closer inspection revealed the internal capsule no longer had a black plastic surround but a white one.
I emailed Rode regarding this... not expecting much. To my delight Peter Freedman himself replied and offered to swap my old NT1 for a new one at no cost !! What service. He also explained that they sometimes upgrade a model when new components become available.
Well this might be ho-hum now for the ageing NT1 but recently it happened to me again ! Our church purchased 2 NT3's a year ago... everything was fine. Recently they purchased a third... thinking we would get the same mic. But when we tried it we had all kinds of feedback problems. Closer inspection at home revealed a number of subtle changes and a slightly different sound.
If a company like Rode intentionally makes changes within a model I would bet that a lot of other manufacturers produce significant variation between mics of the same model, intentionally or unintentionally. I think for me it highlights the need to try the exact mic you plan on purchasing before commiting your hard earned cash.
A few years ago I scrapped enough dollars together to get an NT1 when they first came out. At the time I thought it was wonderful and 2 years later purchased another one so I could do stereo recordings. Funny thing was when I tried the second NT1 I noticed is sounded hotter and had had more top end response. Closer inspection revealed the internal capsule no longer had a black plastic surround but a white one.
I emailed Rode regarding this... not expecting much. To my delight Peter Freedman himself replied and offered to swap my old NT1 for a new one at no cost !! What service. He also explained that they sometimes upgrade a model when new components become available.
Well this might be ho-hum now for the ageing NT1 but recently it happened to me again ! Our church purchased 2 NT3's a year ago... everything was fine. Recently they purchased a third... thinking we would get the same mic. But when we tried it we had all kinds of feedback problems. Closer inspection at home revealed a number of subtle changes and a slightly different sound.
If a company like Rode intentionally makes changes within a model I would bet that a lot of other manufacturers produce significant variation between mics of the same model, intentionally or unintentionally. I think for me it highlights the need to try the exact mic you plan on purchasing before commiting your hard earned cash.