Would you mind a brief, schematic recap? Thank you.Unfortunately, the basis for his reject is based on false assumptions.
I dpon't get this. What is "phase 0"? Did you mean 180°?Assume to signals of the same amplitude and frequency that undergo the MS procedure to form L and R:
For equal phase: M+S ---> + 6 dB, phase 0, M-S ----> - inf. dB,
This is debatable, since all along the mutiple possibilities for M+/-kS where M and S are colinear, phase is 0, so mathematically, the probablity for phase being different than zero at a singular point is feeble. Now, in practice, M and S contain noise, which would result in undetermined phase correlation. Different POV result in different conclusions.phase undefined
I agree. The angle between M+S and M-S is still 90°.For 90 deg. phase: M+S ---> + 3 dB, phase +45 deg., M-S: ---> + 3 dB, phase -45 deg.
?---> no processing ocurred !
"I quit" is the ultimate resource for one that does not manage to prove their point, often because it's unprovable.
"I quit" is the ultimate resource for one that does not manage to prove their point, often because it's unprovable.
"I quit" is the ultimate resource for one that does not manage to prove their point, often because it's unprovable.
So far, I agree. What do you think happens to the output phase after you choose some mass and tension of the diaphragm and put your fully finished microphone in a sound field?In the dynamic microphone case (moving coil or ribbon) the resulting signal follows the velocity of the movement by law of induction. Thus if the exciting sound wave is of harmonic nature (sin or cos) the elongation is the result of integration from velocity, and apart from a constant, is cos or sin, and exhibits a phase shift of 90 deg.
I agree.Therefore I make a very last try – starting by GabrieleP's statement that the diaphragm is moved by air pressure. Most evident it is true – but it does not matter. The point is how this mechanical movement is transformed into an electrical signal, which is the basic task of a microphone.
Everything is in pages 26 & 27 of the Boré/Peus "Microphones" book. They clearly state that in order to have a flat response, dynamic mics must be heavily damped, which applies mechanically a -90° phase shift that counteracts the +90° phase-shift due to transduction.Assuming that very same diaphragm is part of a condenser microphone in one case and part of a dynamic microphone, such as moving coil, or ribbon in the other case. Although it is difficult to achieve this very same structure in practice, let's take it as a theoretical experiment:
In the condenser case, the resulting signal follows amplitude (elongation) by change of capacitance in the capsule.
In the dynamic microphone case (moving coil or ribbon) the resulting signal follows the velocity of the movement by law of induction. Thus if the exciting sound wave is of harmonic nature (sin or cos) the elongation is the result of integration from velocity, and apart from a constant, is cos or sin, and exhibits a phase shift of 90 deg.
Basic math that neglects the mechanical effects is not science.So far, that is basic math
So far, your point has not been proved efficiently.and proves the fundamental incompatibility
You are confusing phase response due to transduction and phase response due to acoustical paths.for a combination of condensers and dynamic microphones in a MS-configuration, which by its nature is phase sensitive.
Not a matter of "arguing". The fact that a dynami mic has a relatively flat response just shows that the simplistic approach of considering only dPhi/dt is incomplete.How far this basic incompatibility can be overcome by structural manipulations in design of different diaphragms for the 2 types is a matter of arguing and mostly lacks a stringent base for proof.
I already agreed with that.PS: The citation of Molke „German reference" from Manfred Hibbing (microphone developer at Sennheiser) concentrates most on proximity effect vs far field and spherical wave fronts. All other points also are limited to the acoustical part and therefore are outside the basic MS discussion.
I'm far from being a native German speaking individual, but I'm quite able at reading a Google translation, as I'm sure many other members are.Other than most forum members I am able to read and understand german as it is my native language.
Is the green trace the condenser?Just out of curiosity, I quickly put a ribbon and small omni condenser near(ish) coincident 0.5 m in front of a speaker.
Yes, if I remember correctly. Since the question was relative phase, I didn’t take any notes. And I wouldn’t over-interpret these plots; the quick setup was far from perfect. Actually, as far as I understand, any deviation from constant amplitude response may give you different phase response as well. You don’t need any transformer for that.Is the green trace the condenser?
Thank you very much for your effort. Could you repeat the measurement at a frequency of 100Hz?Just out of curiosity, I quickly put a ribbon and small omni condenser near(ish) coincident 0.5 m in front of a speaker. This is just a digital scope (and somehow I managed to get by without ever using one before, so bear with me).
That's nothing new here lately. Now JR will jump in and close the thread. Before that, he will tell some of his technical experiences from 30-40 years ago.I respect a moderators freedom to make personal offences due to his large number of messages as long as it is underlined by technical knowledge.
Same here. In the end I stuck with using the Neumann USM69 for the M/S. The last thing I tried for stereo recording and what I really liked was the B&K omni microphones in the Jecklin disc configuration.One thing i know for sure is that ribbon/omni M/S setup is extremely complex, it will depend on frequency, angle of incidence, distance from the source, acoustics of the room, how the omni is placed. End adress omnis are not ideally omni-directional. They are still slightly directional, especially at close proximity. There will be diference depending on how you position the omni.
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