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Dr. Bob
Guest
Sennheiser 421's were a popular AM mic "back in the day" for two reasons. They accentuate any asymmetry in a voice and they have a peak in the upper midrange (as was eluded to my beachguy). Due to the lack of sophisticated in AM processing then compared with today, Sennheiser 421's sounded louder that some other mics if they were set up (phased) so that the positive peaks were higher than the negative (also assuming the processing was also correct or had a "phase flipper". Phasing did not guarantee results as a few people have voices that are asymmetric in the opposite direction to the majority. Phase flippers could thump on the air and were distracting to talent listening to an air feed. Since the early 80's, most AM processors have had a phase rotator that reduces the asymmetry of voices as the processing can be cleaner and the asymmetry is created in the processor.
An area asymmetry is counterproductive is on coded audio (data reduced) like MP3's and web streaming. The coder has to use more of its available bits to code an asymmetric waveform that a symmetric one (clipping is another no-no). So a Sennheiser 421 that sounded great on WJDX then will not sound great on a web stream now.
Dr. Bob
An area asymmetry is counterproductive is on coded audio (data reduced) like MP3's and web streaming. The coder has to use more of its available bits to code an asymmetric waveform that a symmetric one (clipping is another no-no). So a Sennheiser 421 that sounded great on WJDX then will not sound great on a web stream now.
Dr. Bob