I, for one, appreciate the 60’s style capsule. It was perfect for my early ‘60’s U67 recreation!
i think i have enough here to ship at least half of them over the weekend, but the rest might have to wait until just before or after nammOn a totally different topic, I know you said they wouldn’t ship until January, and it’s only *just* January, but is there an ETA on cardioid-only K47V’s for those of us that ordered during the Black Friday sale?
Made me think about modern reproductions of classic analog synths. One of the main reasons they are now considered classics is their musical sound, which is in part due to the components and manufacturing being shittier than today's. Do a 1 on 1 recreation of a classic synth circuit with modern components and manufacturing technology, and it'll sound more behaved and sterile. I sold most of my vintage synths, because of low use, sky rocketing prices and maintenance requirements, but I will never part with my Soviet Polivoks. That thing sounds wild and dangerous, mostly because of its crappy manufacturing and components.because the manufacturing is ****.
Hi Ari!question to the experienced among you: do you prefer 60s or 70s k67s? My current model is based on a 60s k67. throughout the 70s and into the 80s, neumann had runout issues, which lead to the capsules having a bit more at 3-5k. In general, 60s k67s are more extended at both ends and a bit more V shaped. I've had a few people buy these capsules and think they're too V-shaped. Should I offer separate 60s and 70/early 80s tunings? I do think they both sound good, but it's application-specific.
the reason why k67 capsules from the 70s and 80s are so hard to accurately copy is because they're bad. good can be reverse engineered. good is repeatable. bad is like trying to make lightning strike. Here's a backplate from a pretty glorious-sounding k67:
View attachment 142670
gorgeous unit. sweeter and more extended than other units. and why? because the manufacturing is ****.
Hi Ari!
Some time ago you gave us a link to be able to view the FR of different batches of K87 capsules compared to the K67, K87v and K870 targets, if I'm not mistaken. I then saved some images, but in the meantime my smartphone exploded and I lost 250GB of information. From a post I recovered the picture I'm attaching.
I have a big request:
Can you please post a single FR graph with your targets above with unmatched signal levels to see the small differences between the k67/87/870 capsule generations? Yes, the FR only tells part of the story but provides useful information.
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I like k67 capsules from the '60s for their sweetness, warmth, intimacy, feeling (I grew up in the '60s, that's when I started my musical and electronic adventure), but I also like the bite, the incisiveness, the impact of the mid-highs in the modern, dense, powerful mixes that most clients insistently ask me for, associated with the more modern U87.
In addition, each scenario requires microphones with appropriate characters.
So, I love microphones, but I prefer ones with nice mids, (maybe my dull ears don't like Highs, 'V' or 'Smile' equalization), I'm still nostalgic for the AM radio sound, when I used to listen to Radio Luxemburg 208, whole nights when I had propagation better.
In conclusion, I would be happy to have 87 microphones with all flavors, more vintage and more modern.
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But maybe, without separately designing a distinct version of K87 with slightly more prominent 3...5kHz, you could just by simple selection according to tolerance dispersion, separate them into 2 categories, so that the buyer can choose according to preference. I know, it's not ideal, technically correct, but maybe people would be happy with the options.
Ari, thank you once again for your attention to detail, fairness, honesty and all this immense work.
May the new year bring you health, happiness, satisfaction, only good things, exceptional achievements!
Nicholas from Romania
I do have measurements of each generation, without matching the sensitivity. Here:
View attachment 142675
Different comp curve from the chart you posted. A 60s unit, a unit from like 79 or something? And a modern k870. None of these units have the runout that I'm talking about though. All three of these units have in-spec plates. This is somewhat unusual in my experience.
In the past, I have binned capsules for people with different tastes, but I can't do that anymore because we've run into a serious problem with this approach with the new plates:
View attachment 142676
This is multiple units. The new plates don't vary enough to bin. We Are literally pushing up against modern Neumann Berlin tolerances with the new plates. It's really really difficult to engineer failure. Even if we somehow did, that would make the side to side matching worse because there would be no way to easily tell what the response of a plate would be. Separate drawings are definitely necessary and will probably happen.
come on. i haven't been clinically psychotic in weeks...Your attention to detail is clinically psychotic. I love it.
I have M49s with Beesneez M7s but I want to keep those mostly on room duties and for this to be primarily for vocals. I have (all Poctop) 67, 87, 47, 251 so I suppose I want a dedicated vocal 49 that differs from my M7 49s.What are you recording? What will you record? What suits your sound source? What have you already tried? What have you heard that you liked?
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