[quote author="mtt-tom"]this mic was made by (or for) the japanese Drum-Company Pearl (not the swedish company PEARL) in the early 80's and definitively aimed for home recording purposes. Electret condenser type.[/quote]
Okay... so this would make my CR-55 a completely different than my CMR-55H? Doesn't the true condenser CR-55 work with a 9V battery also?
If I understood correctly, almost any condenser can be powered with a 9V battery, they just lack severely in the headroom and frequency response. Many condenser spec sheets say they can be powered with 9-48V. Is it the same with electrets, can they handle 48V or should they have a system to lower the voltage?
So, if this is a electret mic, there is nothing one can do to lower the noise floor? If so, I'll just use them for western/overhead, and get myself a pair of affordable condensers that would serve me better in recording church ambience or a grand piano. I do have a pair of Neumann KM84i's that are good but a bit on the softer side, so I wouldn't mind a bit brighter, forward-sounding mics. I'll list a bunch of cheap mics, is there something that stands out from the bunch? In a positive way, that is...
)
I have heard a lot of people praise Oktava and modded MXL's. Many of the listed are aimed for drum overheads, and I don't know if they would serve me right. I do seem to like AT's and Beyers, possibly MXL's.
AKG C-430
Audio-Technica ATM-33A
Behringer B5
Behringer ECM8000
Beyer MCE-530
JoeMeek JM27S
M-Audio Pulsar
MXL 603
Oktava MK012
Peavey PVM 48O
SE 1A
Sennheiser e614
Shure PG81
SP C4