frans
Well-known member
Maybe it helps: some coils are wound on a round hard, polished surface and the wire is coated so a little heat bakes it all together so after the heat is done, you can pull off the -now one piece- coil. It is glued to the exact center of a membrane thats manufactured with heat and pressure from the right kind of plastic material. A very large magnifying glass is helpful to center the coil, you have to be veeery precise.
Even for a company that has all the knowhow and access to materials it can be hard to re-create things they did a few decades ago. Or even worse: that demand would be in such low numbers that they would lose quite some money in the process. The AKG D12 (and it's variants that started with a 2 or 3) had a lot of change over the decades and if you ever have seen how the capsule is built you understand why nowbody cloned it. It simply would be so expensive that only a few people could afford it. Remember, in the days of old the D12 was close to half a months salary for a worker and these high prices weren't unusual for good mics of the time.
Even for a company that has all the knowhow and access to materials it can be hard to re-create things they did a few decades ago. Or even worse: that demand would be in such low numbers that they would lose quite some money in the process. The AKG D12 (and it's variants that started with a 2 or 3) had a lot of change over the decades and if you ever have seen how the capsule is built you understand why nowbody cloned it. It simply would be so expensive that only a few people could afford it. Remember, in the days of old the D12 was close to half a months salary for a worker and these high prices weren't unusual for good mics of the time.
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