LevinGuitar
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jun 13, 2019
- Messages
- 494
I have two Behringer B1 (797 revA) mics to have fun with. They were non working because of a bad solder in some parts, but now solved and cleaned they are ready to mod
They already sound very good for the price, chinese market is crazy.
KM84 would be pretty easy here saving the DC converter for the 61v polarization, but with this k67 capsule it wouldn't be so big change to spend time and a transformer.
U87 would be the right thing but before changing all circuit, would like to see what can be done as an easy mod.
First I tried a jumper over C15 to skip the unnesesary capacitor, the sound change is veeery small, but still is: something cleaner, more real. The bad thing is we have a 5v over R16 that now goes to the diaphragm lowering the polarization to 56v (61v-5v), and loosing a bit of gain as result.
(Edit: the gain loose is because of getting the bias off jumpering C15)
Since I have no big idea how a DC coverter works, how could I rise the polarization on backplate to 66-70v to compensate the 5v on the diaphragm? Is there a link maybe that explains this maths?
I attached a schematic of my version (Rev A) with some updates of the schematic I found on web.
They already sound very good for the price, chinese market is crazy.
KM84 would be pretty easy here saving the DC converter for the 61v polarization, but with this k67 capsule it wouldn't be so big change to spend time and a transformer.
U87 would be the right thing but before changing all circuit, would like to see what can be done as an easy mod.
First I tried a jumper over C15 to skip the unnesesary capacitor, the sound change is veeery small, but still is: something cleaner, more real. The bad thing is we have a 5v over R16 that now goes to the diaphragm lowering the polarization to 56v (61v-5v), and loosing a bit of gain as result.
(Edit: the gain loose is because of getting the bias off jumpering C15)
Since I have no big idea how a DC coverter works, how could I rise the polarization on backplate to 66-70v to compensate the 5v on the diaphragm? Is there a link maybe that explains this maths?
I attached a schematic of my version (Rev A) with some updates of the schematic I found on web.
Attachments
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