clepsydrae
Active member
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2014
- Messages
- 44
Hi!
I have an early 2000's CAD VX2 -- it's a dual-tube, dual-diaphragm LDC.
It has worked fine for years. Today it exhibited a high-frequency whine for a while. After some time, the whine diminished, and then seemed to hold steady at in inaudible level around 12k.
It may have done this intermittently in the past -- it feels vaguely familiar. It started today after I changed the pickup pattern of the mic (but that may have been a coincidence: I don't know if it started immediately thereafter). It had been running for 30-60m or so before this happened, so it was nice and warm (literally -- two tubes, so it makes some heat.)
You can download an audio file of the noise here -- caution, there are some very loud low-frequency components, so watch those speakers!
If you view it in a DAW you can see the large swings of the signal, and if you listen you can here the fainter but obvious high-frequency whine that moves around in pitch. Sounds like something in the circuit oscillating? (It certainly doesn't seem like any kind of EMF?)
In the audio file, the whine starts relatively steady. At 0:04 I start switching the selectable pad of the mic and you can hear the strong effect that has on the whine. At 0:20 I tap on the mic lightly. At 0:23 I switch the polar patterns which has a less dramatic effect than the pad, but still affects it a little. At 0:40 I turn the power supply for the mic off and then on again, and you can hear the dramatic swoop through the frequency range.
After a few minutes, as I said, the whine seemed to get quieter and rise in pitch until it was not discernible, but I could see on a VST scope that there was an inaudible but strong peak at 12k still hanging on.
Any ideas what this might be? Bad component? Old tube?
The schematic for the mic is here; it comes from a technical thread on groupdiy started by mista min, here: http://groupdiy.com/index.php?topic=44060.0
I'd greatly appreciate any input. Thanks!
I have an early 2000's CAD VX2 -- it's a dual-tube, dual-diaphragm LDC.
It has worked fine for years. Today it exhibited a high-frequency whine for a while. After some time, the whine diminished, and then seemed to hold steady at in inaudible level around 12k.
It may have done this intermittently in the past -- it feels vaguely familiar. It started today after I changed the pickup pattern of the mic (but that may have been a coincidence: I don't know if it started immediately thereafter). It had been running for 30-60m or so before this happened, so it was nice and warm (literally -- two tubes, so it makes some heat.)
You can download an audio file of the noise here -- caution, there are some very loud low-frequency components, so watch those speakers!
If you view it in a DAW you can see the large swings of the signal, and if you listen you can here the fainter but obvious high-frequency whine that moves around in pitch. Sounds like something in the circuit oscillating? (It certainly doesn't seem like any kind of EMF?)
In the audio file, the whine starts relatively steady. At 0:04 I start switching the selectable pad of the mic and you can hear the strong effect that has on the whine. At 0:20 I tap on the mic lightly. At 0:23 I switch the polar patterns which has a less dramatic effect than the pad, but still affects it a little. At 0:40 I turn the power supply for the mic off and then on again, and you can hear the dramatic swoop through the frequency range.
After a few minutes, as I said, the whine seemed to get quieter and rise in pitch until it was not discernible, but I could see on a VST scope that there was an inaudible but strong peak at 12k still hanging on.
Any ideas what this might be? Bad component? Old tube?
The schematic for the mic is here; it comes from a technical thread on groupdiy started by mista min, here: http://groupdiy.com/index.php?topic=44060.0
I'd greatly appreciate any input. Thanks!