#96987 - 12/05/01 04:35 PM
Re: Ribbon mics and the DA7
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Senior Member
Registered: 06/29/00
Posts: 555
Loc: Palo Alto, CA, USA
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I'm using ribbons a lot actually. I have Royer R-121's and Beyer M160's. I find that the DA7 has plenty of gain for them. I mostly use my Royer's with a Vintech 1272 preamp. It's a very smooth yet warm sound. It has less than 60 dB of gain and seems to do okay in most applications. Where I need extra gain I just use the "soft-gain" feature on the DA7.
I've found my Royers to excel at guitar amps, front of kick drum (my favorite!), acoustic guitars (nice!), drum overheards, drum room, horns, percussion, you name it. It is probably my favorite mic since it is extremely versatile. Pick up the Royer Demo CD to hear examples of what people have recorded with Royer ribbons. The R-121 is my go-to mic for most applications actually.
Brad
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#96988 - 12/05/01 04:37 PM
Re: Ribbon mics and the DA7
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Founding Member
Registered: 04/15/99
Posts: 12162
Loc: Los Angeles, CA, USA
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The DA7's preamps have plenty of gain (60dB) to deal with any ribbon mics out there. And if they didn't, Royer just came out with a powered ribbon mic. Ribbon mics are less influenced by preamp mating than condensers, because they don't really care that much about impedance matching (the powered versions being the notable exception). But of course, the better the preamp the better the preamp.
Depending on the mic, they can work with anything. The Royer SF-1s, which I've been using on loan, are designed for general instrument miking. They sound great on ac bs, steel or nylong string guitar, overheads...all kinds of things including guitar amps.
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#96990 - 12/06/01 08:08 AM
Re: Ribbon mics and the DA7
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Senior Member
Registered: 06/29/00
Posts: 555
Loc: Palo Alto, CA, USA
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Nick,
I was under the impression that ribbons were very sensitive to loading...especially older ribbons. That's why many preamp manufacturers have selectable loading on their pres. And I believe that is the reason why Royer has decided to make the active ribbon mics--to eliminate mic/pre load mismatch:
Impedance Matching The electronics in the Active Series ribbons impose a perfect load on the ribbon element at all times, meaning that R-121A’s are able to deliver 100% of their full sonic potential regardless of the input characteristics of the following mic-pre. Due to the low-impedance output, Active Series mics can also be used on extremely long cable runs with minimal signal loss.
A good impedance match is critical with ribbon microphones because impedance mis-matching “loads” a ribbon improperly, resulting in loss of low end, diminished body, lowered sensitivity and overall compromised performance. With the Active Series ribbons, the ribbon element lives in a perfect world; it sees an optimum impedance match at all times regardless of the following equipment, so its performance will never be compromised by the effects of improper loading. In addition, the ribbon element can’t be damaged by phantom power, electrical glitches or miswired cables.
Brad
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#96991 - 12/06/01 10:42 AM
Re: Ribbon mics and the DA7
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Senior Member
Registered: 01/05/00
Posts: 513
Loc: Santa Cruz, CA
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I have a beyer M500, and at least for vox, the DA7 pre is not quite enough. I need to use my 2-610 to really get that mic working great.
_________________________
-Will Shanks will@eartotheground.com
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#96994 - 12/07/01 06:11 AM
Re: Ribbon mics and the DA7
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Senior Member
Registered: 09/15/99
Posts: 982
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Wes Dooley's A.E.A. (RCA 44 clone) ribbon mic is worthy of praise and sounds great with the DA7's mic pre.
And they're good enough to consider buying in pairs.
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