MXL V63M how to open the case

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Rick H

New member
Joined
Nov 24, 2024
Messages
4
Location
Honduras
My V63M after 22 years has become noisy. I suspect bad caps. I live in Honduras and ordering a kit of parts is very expensive to ship here but I can buy parts locally. My first question is: How do I open the mic case to expose the circuit board?
 
Welcome Rick,
My V63M after 22 years has become noisy. I suspect bad caps. I live in Honduras and ordering a kit of parts is very expensive to ship here but I can buy parts locally. My first question is: How do I open the mic case to expose the circuit board?
Yes, describe the noises (or record them) so that we can help you better. I suspect that your microphone has problems in the high impedance area or in the microphone capsule itself due to moisture (and dust?).
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First I must learn how to open the mic. I have instructions for that now. I suspect capacitors only by hunch. With 20 years old electronics caps are the first thing to look at. While I have the mic apart I will look for dust, clean up the circuit board, look at solder joints. I am well experienced with electronics repairs but this is the first microphone I have serviced.
The noise is a low level continuous noise, but random pops which make the microphone unusable. When I leave the mic powered for several hours the pops decrease in rate and volume (as if electrolytics are re-forming). The pops are the bigger issue.
I now have the mic disassembled.
 
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The noise is a low level continuous noise, but random pops which make the microphone unusable. When I leave the mic powered for several hours the pops decrease in rate and volume (as if electrolytics are re-forming). The pops are the bigger issue.
the symptoms you describe match my diagnosis very well, this is not an unknown problem that you describe. I suggest you replace the capsule with another (working capsule) or install a ca. 60pF capacitor as a “dummy capsule”. If the problem is then gone, you know what is going on. An intensive cleaning of the high impedance area with 99% alcohol would also not be wrong, the impurities / moisture are usually not visible to the eye.

Sometimes it also helps to place the microphone in a dry, warm place for a some days...
 
I am well experienced with electronics repairs but this is the first microphone I have serviced.
The situation in condenser mics is indeed somewhat special due to the extremely high impedances (1G!). Even the slightest contamination lead to the problems you mentioned.
 
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