Icantthinkofaname
Well-known member
Really depends on what you're using. You can a lot of reasonably priced donor bodies, then you're looking at maybe $30-$50 if you go with the Takstar capsule, the components (by which I mean the capacitors and resistors and stuff) and PCB will probably set you like $60, then there's whatever the transformer sets you back which will probably be like $40 too. So you could probably do the build for $250ish depending on the quality of what you use. Yes the modded mic route is cheaper, but you might end up replacing a lot of stuff in it depending on the components used in it. If you use a used Behringer B2 Pro or an iSK BM-600 you can get a really good donor body for $100. If you use the older version of the B2 Pro you could have swappable capsules.Not sure if building one from scratch qualifies as easy/cheap/inexpensive.
I think even buying an existing clone you'd likely still not get everything right if you need it to be completely accurate to a real U87.To get in u87 ballpark is relatively easy.
However if you want to nail all the aspects, the exact way it behaves under high spl, headbasket, fet/bias/transformer in respect of harmonic profile under different conditions, body resonances (or absence of these), transformer interraction with transformer coupled preamps, it could easily become never ending game.
All of these are relatively easy to measure in order to know what you are going for, if you have the original. Going by ear is a waste of time.
Under some "normal" conditions, vocal recording, voiceover, acoustic guitar, you will rarely get to the point where any of these really matter. Even though it's measureable, harmonic profile at reasonable level won't be audible no matter what anyone says.
I'd say nail the capsule, make the headbasket non resonant, non reflective, adjust bias/hf response, and as long as the mic doesn't ring like a church bell you are pretty much there. For anything more than that it would only make sense to buy the original, you will spare time and sell at good price once you get tired of it.
I'm not necessarily super interested in having a U87 clone because I've got a C414 B-ULS I feel satisfies the need for a flat LDC, and an AT4050 for a brighter sound. I think if there's a gig where someone is super anal about using a U87 I'd likely need to go into whatever studio they use anyway. (I prefer my SDCs over the LDCs I have and have used anyway)
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