Because some of your remarks show that you have parcellar knowledge of electricity basics. If you think I commented on your phrasing, you are definitely wrong.Anyways, I wonder why is it so much easier for some people to latch onto a side remark or bad phrasing of mine rather than try to talk about the main topic?
I thought I had given a pretty good answer earlier, but it seems it's gone to another thread, so I'll give it again.This far nobody has been able to explain it in a way I and my dirty fingers understand it. Instead there has been unbelievable amount of (deliberate?) misunderstanding and effort to lead the conversation off track. Love this forum regardless and I'm happy to be back here <3
When the capsule's diaphragm is submitted to the bias voltage, a capacitor is mandatory, in order to prevent the high voltage to first ruin the FET's bias and second to blow it up.
When the backplate is receiving bias, a capacitor is not needed, because the diaphragm's voltage is determined by the FET bias.
In addition, when bias is applied to the diaphragm, it takes a high-Z resistor (typically 1G) that happens to be in parallels with the FET's bias resistor (usually another 1G). It results in halving the load on the capsule, which results in 3dB more noise.
As I wrote somewhere else, it's a case of parallels vs. series arrangement.
Of course, backplate and diaphragm could be interverted, but the higher intrinsic capacitance of the backplate makes it more sensitive to electrostatic interference.