Hello there! I hope this is not the wrong part of the forum to ask this.
I inherited a Sony C48 which is faulty. It cuts sound intermitently, and it also has cracks and pops sometimes. After opening it it seems like a general mess inside, and one of the diaphragms is busted (which I suppose is the origin of the fault). Seriously, it looks like the mic did something bad to the "tech" who worked on it. I hate it.
I would like to know if there is anybody in Europe who has experience working on this mic. It is my understanding that reskinning the diaphragm would not get it to original condition... If that's the case, and the only possible way to restorate it would be with a new C48 diaphragm (which would be impossible hard to get), could the bad diaphragm be disconnected and configure the mic as only cardioid?. Right now, setting it in cardioid with the polarity pattern switch doesn't make the problems go away.
It's incredible, but sometimes it works. And it sounds wonderfull. But it doesn't take long before it starts going bad. I would really like to get this working, but I know it is out of my repair skills.
Some pictures of the crime:
I inherited a Sony C48 which is faulty. It cuts sound intermitently, and it also has cracks and pops sometimes. After opening it it seems like a general mess inside, and one of the diaphragms is busted (which I suppose is the origin of the fault). Seriously, it looks like the mic did something bad to the "tech" who worked on it. I hate it.
I would like to know if there is anybody in Europe who has experience working on this mic. It is my understanding that reskinning the diaphragm would not get it to original condition... If that's the case, and the only possible way to restorate it would be with a new C48 diaphragm (which would be impossible hard to get), could the bad diaphragm be disconnected and configure the mic as only cardioid?. Right now, setting it in cardioid with the polarity pattern switch doesn't make the problems go away.
It's incredible, but sometimes it works. And it sounds wonderfull. But it doesn't take long before it starts going bad. I would really like to get this working, but I know it is out of my repair skills.
Some pictures of the crime: