
JerryD
New member
Is there much difference between a Shure SM7 and a SM7B?
scrubs said:Yeah, a used SM7 will probably cost you more than a new SM7B.
Troyflamingo said:>>Is there much difference between a Shure SM7 and a SM7B?<<
There´s a huge difference.
kojdogg said:i remember reading in the context of the dbx 160x/xt/a/ad discussions that any time there is any change in production technique (as with the x to the xt changing from hand stuffed pcb's to machine stuffed pcb's, though with the same circuit design), that the relevant laws require a change in the name of the product to reflect that revision.
Richard Monroe said:Well, I will grant that mics can change over time as they age, due to collection of dust, smoke, corrosion, etc. Exposure to very high SPL's can also alter a diaphragm's performance. What the hell? If you want your SM7b to sound *exactly* like an SM7a, put it in front of Linda Rondstadt, light up a Cohiba, and wait 15 years.-Richie
i don't know that for sure, but this is the post by a dbx employee regarding that series on another mb that gave me that idea:boingoman said:Say what? I've never heard that before. It doesn't seem likely given that there are tons of examples where that doesn't happen. If it is true, I'd be interested to see the actual rules.
edit- at least at the public/marketing level there seems to be no laws concerning changing designations.
kojdogg said:i don't know that for sure, but this is the post by a dbx employee regarding that series on another mb that gave me that idea:
http://www.gearslutz.com/board/high...nce-between-dbx-160-160xt-160a.html#post21390
as far as the actual rule (i.e. law), i have no idea-- you'd have to search it yourself.![]()