M
moresound
Loud Sun Studios
On close micing of a wind instrument how much should I be concerned about the moisture build up on the diaphragm of a SDC or a LDC ?


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Maybe it would help if you would describe WHICH wind instruments and how you're trying to mic them.... sounds like you may be doing something wrong....
(and if they're brass instruments, tell the players to use their spit valves once in a while!)
;-))
On close micing of a wind instrument how much should I be concerned about the moisture build up on the diaphragm of a SDC or a LDC ?
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if you are concerned about that then you are way too close for a good recording andor have the wrong location for your mike
you should be off to the side near the middle, back at least a foot ( i would go 2-3 feet depending on the instrument). and that might still be too close unless you want to hear the fingers and keys moving.
why not a good stereo recording from back several feet?
Ya.... if you read the whole thread (look at #5) that's exactly what I do.
This is for the guest engineers who insists on close micing of horns.
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I think the only axes you'd have any real possibility of too much moisture would be brass. Everything that goes in comes out of the bell so I don't think it's beyond possibility that in a small brass ax like trumpet, enough could come out to not be good for a condenser mic.
i consider the horns to be brass
the others are wind (oboe, sax, recorder, flute, diggeradoo, )
although you do blow through everything i guess except strings and drums.