Beginner's guide to helpful mic building accessories

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Roman Beilharz

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 17, 2023
Messages
77
Hi everybody,

as a former newbie with very little mic building knowledge, I have evolved to a more experienced builder with a lot more understanding of what's going on under the hood - thanks to this amazing forum. So it is time for a big THANK YOU GUYS and a series of posts to give something back to the community - and be as helpful as possible in times when more and more people seem to establish a solid "it's all about me" attitude.

So if you have cool tricks up your sleeve to share with beginners, that make your mic building life a lot easier and you wish you had come across earlier, this is the place to add them.

I'll make a start with a random collection of accessories I wish I had had right from the start:

1. Get a decent soldering station with controllable temperature and a hot air gun. I know the affordable ones are not always of great overall quality, but this is a game changer compared to the good old stick types.

2. Get a decent middle class DMM. I am happily using an ASTRO AI DMM, but I've heard that if you want to invest more, get a decent FLUKE
Astro AI DMM on Amazon

3. Get a goldsmith set of small pliers of all kinds: round nose, flat nose, long nose, bent nose... and clippers with small heads as well.

4. Set up a solid mic boom stand and attach a Manfrotto super clamp to it. This bugger is great to help you soldering cables, PCBs, or tampering around with parts and capsules:

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5. Get a PCB holder like this one

1730970301319.jpeg

6. Get a set of M3 brass standoffs in a variety of heights.

7. Get a set of M2, M2.5 and M3 screws and nuts in a variety of lengths.

8. Get a set of shrink tubing in a variety of colors and diameters.

9. For point-to-point building and as a general problem solver to reliably connect parts mechanically, a set of nickel plated single leader sleeves in a variety of diameters and lengths with a matching crimper wrench (used for leader bait building for fishing!) came in handy quite often for my builds:

1730970428611.png

10. Get a package of 0.25 watts resistors in a variety of values (10R - 1M).

11. Get a set of stranded wire (0,25mm diameter & 0,5 diameter) in a variety of colors

1730994596416.png


Alright, thats all that came to mind in a first go, feel free to add helpful stuff and happy building!

Ro
 
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I've heard that if you want to invest more, get a decent FLUKE
... Or a Brymen (y)
(y)
I have been repairing & building stuff for nearly 40 years & in that time I have never owned a fluke or other expensive meter. I'm currently using a multicom meter which cost me about £15 U.K I have never not been able to build or fix something because I haven't got an expensive meter. I do have a really good bench meter that will measure down to 1/100 of an ohm etc etc, but I rarely use it. Just saying....

One feature I find pretty useful is to have a 4000 count, or even better 6000 count meter. 4000 because when you are working on things like a Neve box which runs on 24v you get a more accurate reading of the 24v.
 
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1. Get a decent soldering station with controllable temperature.
I've never had a temperature controlled iron & it's not stopped me building or repairing anything in nearly 40 years. I just use a weller tcp, simple & reliable. & easy to get spares. tips etc. In my view having a variety of tips is more useful than the iron being temperature controllable. YMMV.
 
A good desoldering gun is very useful.
Donegan OptiVisor!
View attachment 139581
I have 3 of them, picked up from various estate sales. I also have the one my dad bought in the '70s.
Their 5X is the most useful to me. A 10X helps with SMD and very close inspection work.

Accept no substitute!
These are very useful with/or a magnifying lamp !
 
Yes! That's the one. It used to be on sale for like 50 Euros or so - a no-brainer. I have to say that after using it for a year, the plastic nut/ring holding the soldering iron together came off, because the thread was worn out - due to the large temperature differences, I guess. But with a slice of 1'' shrink tubing and some blowing of the hot air gun, I was up and running again - and I think this will never come off again ;)
 
I've never had a temperature controlled iron & it's not stopped me building or repairing anything in nearly 40 years. I just use a weller tcp, simple & reliable. & easy to get spares. tips etc. In my view having a variety of tips is more useful than the iron being temperature controllable. YMMV.

Hi Rob, thanks for chiming in! I guess as you have decades of experience with traditional/simple soldering/metering devices, this tells us how skillful you are. So sure: Your equipment does the trick, if you know how to do it.

But for me as a recording studio owner, musician and electronics enthusiast with much less experience, it turned out it was much easier not to burn up/melt styroflex caps or the like or to wait endlessly for the solder to melt while mounting heatsinks, when the temperature can be controlled. I just don't have your expertise, I reckon and make up for it with my station :cool:

This being said, I realize effective temperature control is counter-intuitive at the beginning:

It works much better to crank the temperature up to, lets say 380 C, when soldering sensitive parts - like solder lugs into acrylic PCBs, styro caps etc. - and be quick and precise and get it over with as quickly as possible, than to use a lower (you might think safer) temperature and poke around for minutes.

For heatsink mounting, you will want to crank it all the way up - choose 450 degrees Celsius if you can.

My default temperature is 360 C, for very small soldering dots and thin part legs, something like 330 C will do.

And I totally forgot about the soldering tips, I absolutely agree it's important to have different ones at hand. My station came with 6 of them, but I am using the 2mm wide and the 4mm wide "screwdriver" ones the most. The very spikey ones didn't cover enough surface to make soldering much fun, as for traditional mic building, our soldering dots/lugs are huge compared to modern SMD electronics.
 
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