You will wait forever. I'm not making a model. I told you, LT-Spice Library.
Please use this "bell & whistle"; plotting noise spectral density against log frequency as it is fundamental to our comparison.
Is it now? I suggest unweighted SNR 20-20kHz instead. It is a simple single unambiguous number, no debate. -127dB Ein beats -126dB Ein. No interpretation needed, no ambiguity and Curated Egging.
Sigh! It may have escaped your notice that I did the measurements in Zephyr.doc ...
Quel dommage!
No, it honestly never even remotely entered my mind they that....ahhhm...lost for words...ahhhm...thing with the professionalism, accuracy and genersl aptitude it evidences, might be associated with such august fellow as you, who designed soundfield microphnes at Calrec, is the only one in the world who knows how to calibrate ambisonic microphones, endorsed by all sorts of famous British engineer's working in the field of recorded sound.
I used my own "bell & whistle" to show the noise spectrum.
You mean you used generic software to do an FFT.
I'm not sure what numbers you are complaining about. I think you are querying the absolute level.
I am not complaining. I merely observe that ALL numbers are wrong. Observing, note. Not complaining.
Alas, I don't have an absolute level calibration
Then why even publish?
And why not pay a pittance and send your ECM8000 off for calibration? I did.
Or lacking this, BORROW a calbritated SPL Meter from your friendly neighborhood environmental officer, to see if your neighbors are too noisy. Might cost you a shout for a pint of Carlton.
The only number I have for the ECM 8000 is a cryptic "-60dB" number on the box.
Then why not make a comparison to a reference of known accuracy. The speaker you used as source may have full documented response and sensitivity, if not, it would probably have been possible to borrow one. Or as mentioned a well calibrated SPL meter might have been used.
Jochen Schulze has 15mV/Pa while you claim 8mV/Pa
That's the number in the calibration report I received, which I secondarily verified using a calibrated SPL Meter and AP2.
I'm not surprised that these 4 numbers are very different as I'm aware of at least 3 very different circuits for ECM8000.
I am aware of one circuit between the early 00's when I got my unit (with an RadioShack SPL Meter for SPL) and the mid teens, when I last purchased one for QC purposes and opened it up.
Many modifications abound on the net, these are not "original" ootb.
Transistor types varied widely, as did capsules. But these small electret capsules regardless of maker, tens to have similar sensitivity levels.
I found no real differences between the early 00's and the mid 10's unit
But what have you got against the noise curves on page 10 ?
You mean this:
I have nothing against it whatsoever. Mind you, I also see no possible use.
Absolute levels have no bearing on these curves which were all taken with the same setting on the preamp.
So you are comparing noise levels without correcting for sensitivity? I am unsure what you are trying to do. But whatever it is, its pointless.
So the info is all relative.
Yes, relative on multiple levels. So the lowest noise microphone in this chart, may actually also have low sensitivity, so in practice it would have the greatest actual noise.
Absolute reference levels and calibration are essential for measurements to have meaning.
I'm doing my best in between my beach bum activities. Dis LTspice sim stuff is new to me but I'm learning.
Why do you insist on not using TINA-TI but instead the Spice simulator with the least intuitive, least user friendly interface available?
There appears to be a lot of gob trash talking but I'm not sure I'm the generator
Well, I don't post how my circuits are so much better than everyone else's and how great a fellow I am.
I am only interested in what is right and to promote learning, not to big up my ego. I'm here to learn more than I teach hopefully.
I missed that
Where did you post this?
A few posts back I did a rough noise analysis on paper.
In my Schoeps variation, my desire to handle high SPL's and to use the 2SK660 FET caused me to set the split load phase inverter/buffer resistors at 10kOhm for 0.5mA Idss FET's.
The "generic" version uses 2.2k. this will cause around 7dB more noise for my version with 2SK660.
However, by not using the 2SK170 I would probably claw back around 3dB of that noise. And by using diode biasing instead of 1G resistors we probably end up not sll that far apart in practice.
So practically, maybe a little advantage for the "generic" circuit, but unlikely 10dB.
I could complicate the circuit by adding FET's in parallel (5 pcs give 2.5mA and ~ 5V across each load resistor). Or I could make some kind of compound circuit that draws more current.
I found the noise of the original low enough for my uses and usefully lower than many generic china microphones sold sub 1k as recording microphones and left it at that.
As said, this was not a rigorous design for best performance.
It was simply a quick and dirty hack to a bunch of BM-X00 bodies, with a bunch of 34mm Capsules off Taobao and a hacked up BM-X00 PCB's to make of useful studio recording mic's with s few different "flavours", that did better all around than the kind of Mic's selling for ~ 500 USD equivalent on Taobao.
Not a huge love affair, but more like a quickie in the back at Coyote Ugly, fast, satisfying, few strings attached and generally guilt free.
BTW for the record, my claim is that Zephyr's Schoeps variant is 10dB quieter than yours with a capsule similar to his ... and SimpleP48 is perhaps a dB quieter than that.
Yes. And even basic back of envelope calculations call that into question.
When your TINA sims prove or disprove this claim, will you enlighten us as to why you think this the case?
I will not waste dny more time, except to input the SimpleP48 circuit you give to me, place it in the schematics sheet as my own send run MY analysis, plus perhaps yours...
But I AM interested in high SPLs & low distortion. That's the reason for SimpleP48RCA ... which BTW is on page 12 of SimpleP48.pdf ... as one of the 2 recommended variants. So I'm not sure it counts as "moving goalposts"
I do not see a complete circuit. What I see is the "Linkwitz Mod" (yes, another bloody Kraut, I know) being misattributed:
What I do not see is a circuit I can input into a simulator.
With some luck we might all get something useful out of this if Thor & I stick to refining our models so the sims represent 'real life'
As remarked before, my models are sufficiently refined and validated with real circuits and test gear.
And all my test gear is calibrated as well.
Thor