Diving deeper into microphone and impedance theory; Neutral Electron and the Metatronic Configuration in the Balanced Impedance Circuit, possible?

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This lecture is actually quite good, and accurate as far as I can tell (I didn’t listen to the whole thing). There doesn’t seem to be any mention of “metatrons” or anything like that at all. If something like that existed, don’t you think the people who were smart enough to discover subatomic particles and develop quantum physics would have mentioned it?
 
I am going to answer this on the assumption that it is all asked in good faith and that OP is not just trolling.
Wow. That was a genuinely patient and well-thought-out explanation, outlining the content and implications of the question in a very precise but still kind way. Respect.

You a teacher by any chance? :)

/Jakob E.
 
I am going to answer this on the assumption that it is all asked in good faith and that OP is not just trolling.



  1. a previously unnoticed effect.
......
Not everyone agrees that loading a microphone with such a heavy load sounds "special." If the microphone is not transformer coupled (and sometimes when it is) that will generally introduce much higher distortion, and will cut the level in half (6dB), which usually results in 3dB to 6dB worse noise performance. That is why it is almost universally recommended to have a load impedance of at least 10x the microphone source impedance.
The results of loading a microphone with a low load impedance is relatively easy to explain with frequency response differences vs. load, and distortion spectrum. Lossless flow of energy and a quantum field of attraction around a neutral electron are not involved.

Agree with all that. Although tbh I'm not sure it was worth your time to write it all 🤔
And - yeah - some unfounded / confused comments about transducer impedance matching.
 
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