I'm open to revising my knowledge but you're providing me with a lot of information I already know about the AKG microphones. I have no agenda in this matter but correcting other members with long explanations and no sources is quite common in this forum.
The sourses that you like to see and not a "interview of someone that knows someone, who has tells him something, about someone elses microphone..." on Tape Op...
Make a search for this article in PDF...
Recreating the MGM “Church” Vacuum Tube Microphone by C.H. Preston 2011
It's also very common that DIY:ers think that they are smarter and know more than the engineers at Neumann, AKG, Schoeps etc. These where the engineers that designed and built the some of the best microphones we still know of today. They pushed the sound quality of recording to a whole new level. I'm pretty sure they knew their basic maths.
Yeah, I'm not an iconoclast...
I am an anarchist blasphemer and I don't slavish "raise and praise" for your "holy trinity" of "Neumann, AKG, Schoeps etc."
These were and they are just commersial capitalistic companies in a commersial capitalistic world and as you know by Karl Marx's "Capital" book every commersial capitalistic company in this commersial capitalistic world is looking forword to maximize their profit, even by "taked" - inspired by... - copy and paste, named it as you like it, and as your "holy trinity" of "Neumann, AKG, Schoeps etc." allows you to do so...
If AKG engineers knew their basic maths, then why they did made these basic mathimatical mistakes?...
If Georg Neumann was so sure satisfied about the fixed biasing that he & his team used in the Neumann U-47, U-48, M-49A, M-49B microphones, then why in the Neumann M-49C microphone & for the Microtech Gefell microphones they decided to used the (cheaper & easier) Cathode Biasing, that Church already used in his microphone?...
I've read many times that the schematics you find of the Church microphone are wrong. How did you find out that he used 1k7 instead of 820R as the schematics says?
As you can see, the
820R Cathode Resistor is there in the schematic if you will like to use the
5751 tube, for the
6072 - 12AY7 you will use
1k7 Cathode Resistor...
Side note: If anyone has an explanation why AKG used 2K7 in C24 and 1K8 in ELA M250/251E, I would love to know.
In any logical and scientifically aspect, for the
100KΩ Plate Resistor load the
center biasing for any
ECC81 – 12AT7 tube with
120 Volts Plate Voltage, will be the
Grid Bias Voltage of -1,58 Volts, at
0.60 mA, at the
60 Volts of the
Load Line…
Now if you
divided the
1,58 Volts / 0.60mA you will have the
most properly and correctly value of
2.633,3333Ω Cathode Resistor, not the 2.7KΩ Cathode Resistor that the
AKG failed used…
What surprise, what a surprise, again total wrong Cathode Resistors, but this time also for total wrong tubes…
The
ELA-M 250 (non E) with
AC701 tube used
3,6KΩ Cathode Resistor…
I believe the Church microphone (just like a lot of other rare mythical gear) is getting so much attention because it's unavailable to hear for yourself. Very few, even among microphone enthusiasts, have seen it and even less have used it.
Francis Albert Sinatra (December 12, 1915 – May 14, 1998) has used it and showed with it in the film…
Take a listen...
Test 28 Church U47 CINEMIKE Tube Microphone Vocals Johnny
Test 58 Church 47 Cinimike Tube Microphone made by Stanley Church
Test 30 Church U47 CINEMIKE Tube Microphone Acoustic Guitar Noah Needleman