Barry Hufker
Well-known member
Waiting eagerly (patiently, not so much )...
Edit: The goal of this “experiment” wasn’t to crown a winner or to say definitively which mic is the “best” but it was interesting to see how the KM-184 bubbled to the top.Did you tally up the votes?
(I didn't vote because they all sounded fine to my tin ears, but I'm curious how others ranked them.)
That's pretty much exactly what I hear and think. I haven't read the answer yet. I think D is the much “bashed” KM184, which I know and appreciate very well.Thank you joulupukki! The main takeaway for me is how similar these sound. On some sources I can't tell any difference, others I'm feeling certain I've identified some difference in frequency response but then second guess myself on listening again. Wild guess: I think D is the 184 and B is the micparts. I'd be happy with any of these mics but if I had to pick D feels the best to me, then C or A, then B.
Ohh, I've come across that quite often online in the last few years.(check gearslutz) The KM184 would be too sharp in the treble and only the KM84 would be the real deal and so on. I never understood that, I think they are very good and universal workhorses in the recording studio and also live on stage. I've worked with them myself for long years and I think you get a lot of microphone for the money. Very flexible.who has bashed the km184 ?
I honestly hope the KM184 naysaying keeps up because it makes them a good buy on the used market.
I have my drumset right now with two KM184 overhead and a 421-II on the bass drum, which as the internet knows, is absolutely awful.
Well, the KM 84 is dead flat; doesn't have an "eq-curve".Myself I dont like the km184 that much compared to the km84, but its really more of getting a more likeable eq-curve from the start with the km84, nothing you cant eq to get the same in mix... if anyone would want imo
Im sure km184 is "dead flat" aswell, still dont sound the same, same with everything. The sonic differences is best described with eq curve in mind in terms of more mid, more highs, less low etc etc...Well, the KM 84 is dead flat; doesn't have an "eq-curve".
Anyone who expected same from KM 184 was disappointed.
Thank you @jp8 for the chance to try out your circuits and great job with them!Now that @Joulupikki has revealed the microphones, I'd like to chime in and tell you something about the KM84+ and KM84++. But first of all, I want to thank Joulupukki for the many hours he spent testing my PCBAs, all the interesting discussions we had, and making all the awesome recordings and Youtube videos since March this year. It was a great learning experience for both of us! But it was also good to receive comments from others, in this case from all those who dared to speak out and left their opinions in this thread or on Youtube. In some cases your comments supported what we experienced ourselves, and in other cases they didn't. Which is fine too. Many thanks to all!
Just a quick note on this…SDC-84: I don't know how close the SDC-84 follows the legacy KM84 design. But at least it has a different capsule and transformer than the KM84+/++. And in the mic used in this blind test, Joulupukki removed the feedback capacitor C2. That makes it more sensitive of course, but also affects the Frequency Response and distortion. I think this caused the edginess of this mic, which could be appropriate on, e.g. guitar.
??Im sure km184 is "dead flat" aswell, still dont sound the same, same with everything. The sonic differences is best described with eq curve in mind in terms of more mid, more highs, less low etc etc...
Matt would have been right if the JFET amplifier would have had an open-loop gain much higher than the closed loop. And if the output impedance driving the transformer would be sufficiently low. That is not the case. Without C2, output impedance rises, moving the RL high-pass frequency up. And if the transformer output is capacitively loaded, e.g. with 22nF RFI suppression caps or extremely long cables, it will reduce the upper bandwidth and increase harmonic and IM distortion. Some snapshots below show the effects described (pictures taken with my phone from PC display). I assume in @joulupukki's SDC-84, only the low end was affected by the removal of C2.“The feedback capacitor does not change the frequency response.”
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