surfmaster
New member
but you cant stick a perfectly flat omni condenser in front of a stack and get the sound of a dynamic. its just not possible the capsules of condensers and dynamics interact so differently.
orksnork said:not necessarily...
and what about mic'ing a bass cabinet...with an SDC?? i dunno
gabereding said:Thanks again everyone!
I guess I was looking for something a little more in depth...Sorry..
What I mean is, Does using say, a large diaphragm condenser do something like smear the transients, boost certain frequencies, and introduce mild distortion? What does a different capsule DO to the sound? What do the electronics and their qualities DO to the sound? How do they change it?
Thanks again! I appreciate it!
-Gabe
Sorry.
gabereding said:I've read a lot about mics, but they never get technical enough for me I guess. -Gabe


gabereding said:Thanks alot everyone!
I already read that thread. Thanks!
Basically, yeah. I've tried the standard approach to things, and it just doesn't seem to get the sound right. I've put an SM57 on a snare drum. I thought it sounded like crap. Even with good compression, EQ, etc. I like the way my snare sounds. But through an SM57 it sounded nothing like it, and not like I wanted it to.
Miking a snare with an SM57 is supposedly some "industry standard" whatever that means.
gabereding said:Once again thank you one and all!
I guess the reason all this is under my attention is that I've never gotten a mic to sound what I would consider "Great". I hear all these great sounds, but when I try to record them, it's changed completely.
chessrock said:Well, using that reasoning ... why not just have sex with the same woman for the rest of your life?
Oh, yea. Some of us are actually doing that.Sorry.
.

and what about mic'ing a bass cabinet...with an SDC?? i dunno
gabereding said:Hello!
I was just wondering. According to stuff that I've read small diaphragm condenser mics are the most accurate kind of mic. Is this true?
Also, if this is the case, why can't I just buy one, use it to record everything, and then if I want "coloration" add it with a mic and/or preamp modeler plugin or something?
I'm probably over simplifying, but I'm just honestly wondering.
Anyways, thanks a lot!
-Gabe
littledog said:Just a few parameters that will vary from mic to mic:
How much proximity effect
Which frequencies are hyped or cut
How susceptible to handling noise and mechanical transmission of stand vibration
How well it deals with plosives
Off axis frequency response
Self-noise
Specifics or the polar pattern
Ability to handle extremely high or low SPL's
Ruggedness of the mic to withstand potential abuse
All of the above are slightly different from one mic to another, and different sound sources and recording situations may require different mic'ing solutions. And, again, you might just find yourself recording more than one instrument at a time, or want to record in stereo - which itself is the biggest reason for owning more than one mic.
I think that pretty well spells it out. Do you need more than that?
gabereding said:No one has shown me any difference in microphones other than frequency response, and telling me that "they're just different, okay?" I understand the physical differences in microphones, such as dynamic versus condenser versus ribbon. Large D versus small, internal electronics, etc. But what difference does it make other than FR and transient response? I know about the different sounds, I've used tons of mics. Is there something I can read somewhere that compares what each mic actually does to the wave? I've read a lot about mics, but they never get technical enough for me I guess.
