rock soderstrom
Tour de France
Hello girls and boys,
I bought an untested MB-C540 from Haun for 30€. Unfortunately the mic set is no longer complete and is quite heavily used.
The MB-C540 could be a good canidate for a tube mod , spontaneously the S52 design comes to mind. Before I would do something like that, I would give the mic first a chance and also test its original function. Is it still alive?
In this thread I want to collect and post all the info I found about the mic.
The MB-C540 was manufactured in the 70s by the company Mikrofonbau GmbH from Obrigheim/Germany. The company is still active today and known under the current name MBHO (GmbH), which means Mikrofonbau Haun Obrigheim (LLC, Ltd.).
MBHO has produced since its foundation in 1962, in addition to its own microphones, for numerous microphone manufacturers and OEM resellers microphones or parts of them.
Quote from the MBHO site: "Many well known industry customers like Telefunken, Strässer, Dual, Grundig, ITT, Saba, US-Clearcom, Audix and the highly acclaimed Brauner valve tube microphones have been satisfied partners of MBHO.
The main figures of MBHO are Herbert Haun and Manfred Schneider, who can be considered without doubt as heavyweights of the German microphone industry.
Most of the info I found regarding the MB-C540 is based on the following german article I found here.
Since not everyone understands German, I will summarize this very informative article with my humble skills in English
The MB-C 540 is a true condenser microphone system with interchangeable capsules.
The capsules are based on gold coated Mylar foil and the following variants were available:
91540 - Omnidirectional
92540 - cardioid
93540 - cardioid with increased sensitivity 11mV/mubar
94540 - cardioid with (in this article not further specified) special characteristics
The headamp is based on a single FET transistor in a source follower circuit, see schematic. If the amplifier is powered by batteries (2x Pertrix 74 IEC 10 F 15, 15Volt each), pin 4 must be connected to pin 5, which was originally done by a system cable named MB-A9541, which I don't have. The batteries are probably also rather rare today.
The microphone can be powered by the internal batteries or also external PSU via pin 5. The voltage must be between 20-50V and must not exceed a rest ripple of 1mV. With this type of power supply, which is standardized by DIN45594, supply lines up to 30m are possible.
If longer cable lengths are required without battery power, an additional adapter (MB-C548) and phantom power can be used to realize cable lengths of up to 100m.
This adapter also contains a stepdown transformer, which transfers the 500 Ohm output impedance of the microphone to 200 Ohm.
Other accessories such as 10dB pad, external power supply switch and low-cut (rumble) filter are available as external accessories, see photo.
In this magazine's test, the MB-C540 performed very well for the price (435FR swiss francs in 1975/76!). In direct comparison with unspecified professional studio microphones (probably Neumann and/or Schoeps), reduced bass response and slightly increased noise were noted.
Armed with this information I will now build an adapter cable and a temporary power supply to test the mic.
to be continued...
I bought an untested MB-C540 from Haun for 30€. Unfortunately the mic set is no longer complete and is quite heavily used.
The MB-C540 could be a good canidate for a tube mod , spontaneously the S52 design comes to mind. Before I would do something like that, I would give the mic first a chance and also test its original function. Is it still alive?
In this thread I want to collect and post all the info I found about the mic.
The MB-C540 was manufactured in the 70s by the company Mikrofonbau GmbH from Obrigheim/Germany. The company is still active today and known under the current name MBHO (GmbH), which means Mikrofonbau Haun Obrigheim (LLC, Ltd.).
MBHO has produced since its foundation in 1962, in addition to its own microphones, for numerous microphone manufacturers and OEM resellers microphones or parts of them.
Quote from the MBHO site: "Many well known industry customers like Telefunken, Strässer, Dual, Grundig, ITT, Saba, US-Clearcom, Audix and the highly acclaimed Brauner valve tube microphones have been satisfied partners of MBHO.
The main figures of MBHO are Herbert Haun and Manfred Schneider, who can be considered without doubt as heavyweights of the German microphone industry.
Most of the info I found regarding the MB-C540 is based on the following german article I found here.
Since not everyone understands German, I will summarize this very informative article with my humble skills in English
The MB-C 540 is a true condenser microphone system with interchangeable capsules.
The capsules are based on gold coated Mylar foil and the following variants were available:
91540 - Omnidirectional
92540 - cardioid
93540 - cardioid with increased sensitivity 11mV/mubar
94540 - cardioid with (in this article not further specified) special characteristics
The headamp is based on a single FET transistor in a source follower circuit, see schematic. If the amplifier is powered by batteries (2x Pertrix 74 IEC 10 F 15, 15Volt each), pin 4 must be connected to pin 5, which was originally done by a system cable named MB-A9541, which I don't have. The batteries are probably also rather rare today.
The microphone can be powered by the internal batteries or also external PSU via pin 5. The voltage must be between 20-50V and must not exceed a rest ripple of 1mV. With this type of power supply, which is standardized by DIN45594, supply lines up to 30m are possible.
If longer cable lengths are required without battery power, an additional adapter (MB-C548) and phantom power can be used to realize cable lengths of up to 100m.
This adapter also contains a stepdown transformer, which transfers the 500 Ohm output impedance of the microphone to 200 Ohm.
Other accessories such as 10dB pad, external power supply switch and low-cut (rumble) filter are available as external accessories, see photo.
In this magazine's test, the MB-C540 performed very well for the price (435FR swiss francs in 1975/76!). In direct comparison with unspecified professional studio microphones (probably Neumann and/or Schoeps), reduced bass response and slightly increased noise were noted.
Armed with this information I will now build an adapter cable and a temporary power supply to test the mic.
to be continued...
Attachments
Last edited: