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#11
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Richard Knoppow wrote:
I am not surprized that no one makes crystal or ceramic elements any more. For the most part microphones to fill similar applications now are electrets. Actually, there are a few companies making ceramic elements for military applications. They can stand abuse that would kill even the Gentex military electrets. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#12
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![]() "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... Richard Knoppow wrote: "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... coffelt2 wrote: I am currently using an old Turner microphone and like the way it sounds. Also I am a fan of some of the older EV desk microphones, which still turn up cheaply at hamfests. If you find a low-Z mike that you like, there is no reason you can't just stick a step-up transformer in the base to drive the Viking. Which model Turner? Model 252. Low-Z version of the 250 with the lift switch (which I strongly discourage the use of). If you were using a Viking II you would probably want the 250 or to use a step-up transformer. --scott My one and only Turner mic is a 999, a low impedance dynamic. I came into a windfall of good impedance matching transformers (UTC 01 Ouncers) so matching is no problem. Its a decent mic but may not be representative since I had to remove a dent from the diaphragm. This can be done with sticky tape and great care. The mic sounds good, less rise in the high end than my Electro-Voice 635. I think this is probably the original sound. Turner seems to be the only one of the original big four makers of PA mics that did not survive. Astatic, Electro-Voice, and Shure Brothers all managed to navigate the vicissitudes of life. American Microphone was another company who did not survive. Their last line of mics was a valiant attempt to break into the high quality broadcast and recording market but their technology left a lot to be desired. I have a couple of their high-end cardioid mics. A friend had a recording made on his Ampex part of which was done with an experimental American pressure mic intended for high quality recording and another section with a "Telefunken" mic, actually a Scheops 201-M. No comparison, the American mic made all the instruments sound like they were made of paper boxes. The Schoeps mic is the one that actually established Telefunken's reputation and is the mic used for the Mercury Records "Living Presence" series. The cardioid used a ribbon element with a dynamic just under it. It has decent patterns in one plane going horizontally around the mic but, of course, there is no match whatsoever in the vertical plane and very poor directivity. Actually, Brush made a similar microphone in the mid or late 1930s, essentially an RCA Junior Velocity mic with a Brush crystal element fixed to the top of the ribbon and facing up. I suspect it had much the same problems. Brush used a rather complicated network to match the two sections. I don't think they made these for long. -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL |
#13
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On 4/1/2010 9:56 AM, Scott Dorsey wrote:
You can no longer get either the original crystal element or the ceramic element, but Astatic will sell you a dynamic replacement. The dynamic is a whole lot smoother and less brittle sounding, but maybe that's a bad thing in a pileup. Hi, You can install a Kobitone crystal element in the D-104 mic head, Mouser.com P/N 25LM022 It has a raising freq characteristic similar to the old Astatic crystal element. Electric Radio Magazine, Jan 2010, had the how-to-do-it article. 73, Ed Knobloch |
#14
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![]() "Edward Knobloch" wrote in message ... On 4/1/2010 9:56 AM, Scott Dorsey wrote: You can no longer get either the original crystal element or the ceramic element, but Astatic will sell you a dynamic replacement. The dynamic is a whole lot smoother and less brittle sounding, but maybe that's a bad thing in a pileup. Hi, You can install a Kobitone crystal element in the D-104 mic head, Mouser.com P/N 25LM022 It has a raising freq characteristic similar to the old Astatic crystal element. Electric Radio Magazine, Jan 2010, had the how-to-do-it article. 73, Ed Knobloch I found this doing a Google search. They appear to be available in several sizes and types and the company also makes ceramic elements. I found prices varied by a 2:1 ratio depending on who was offering them. Mouser had about the lowest prices, only about $5 US each. I suspect these will fit a lot of old crystal mics and make them useable again. -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL |
#15
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Richard Knoppow wrote:
My one and only Turner mic is a 999, a low impedance dynamic. I came into a windfall of good impedance matching transformers (UTC 01 Ouncers) so matching is no problem. Its a decent mic but may not be representative since I had to remove a dent from the diaphragm. This can be done with sticky tape and great care. The mic sounds good, less rise in the high end than my Electro-Voice 635. I think this is probably the original sound. The 252 definitely has a serious rise on-axis and it's kind of grating-sounding. That comes across nicely in a pileup. Turner seems to be the only one of the original big four makers of PA mics that did not survive. Astatic, Electro-Voice, and Shure Brothers all managed to navigate the vicissitudes of life. American Microphone was another company who did not survive. Their last line of mics was a valiant attempt to break into the high quality broadcast and recording market but their technology left a lot to be desired. I have a couple of their high-end cardioid mics. Are they any good? I remember American Microphone trying really hard to sell into the broadcast market with really cool-looking handheld omni mikes. The chief engineer of the radio station I worked for dismissed them all as "crap that's designed to look nice on TV." A friend had a recording made on his Ampex part of which was done with an experimental American pressure mic intended for high quality recording and another section with a "Telefunken" mic, actually a Scheops 201-M. No comparison, the American mic made all the instruments sound like they were made of paper boxes. The Schoeps mic is the one that actually established Telefunken's reputation and is the mic used for the Mercury Records "Living Presence" series. The cardioid used a ribbon element with a dynamic just under it. It has decent patterns in one plane going horizontally around the mic but, of course, there is no match whatsoever in the vertical plane and very poor directivity. Actually, Brush made a similar microphone in the mid or late 1930s, essentially an RCA Junior Velocity mic with a Brush crystal element fixed to the top of the ribbon and facing up. I suspect it had much the same problems. Brush used a rather complicated network to match the two sections. I don't think they made these for long. Actually, the WE 639 (later the Altec 639) used the same arrangement. It could be a figure-8, an omni, or a cardioid, but it only sounded even remotely decent as a figure-8 because the dynamic was just so awful. I thought all the Living Presence recordings were done with Telefunken condenser mikes? --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#16
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![]() "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... Richard Knoppow wrote: My one and only Turner mic is a 999, a low impedance dynamic. I came into a windfall of good impedance matching transformers (UTC 01 Ouncers) so matching is no problem. Its a decent mic but may not be representative since I had to remove a dent from the diaphragm. This can be done with sticky tape and great care. The mic sounds good, less rise in the high end than my Electro-Voice 635. I think this is probably the original sound. The 252 definitely has a serious rise on-axis and it's kind of grating-sounding. That comes across nicely in a pileup. Turner seems to be the only one of the original big four makers of PA mics that did not survive. Astatic, Electro-Voice, and Shure Brothers all managed to navigate the vicissitudes of life. American Microphone was another company who did not survive. Their last line of mics was a valiant attempt to break into the high quality broadcast and recording market but their technology left a lot to be desired. I have a couple of their high-end cardioid mics. Are they any good? I remember American Microphone trying really hard to sell into the broadcast market with really cool-looking handheld omni mikes. The chief engineer of the radio station I worked for dismissed them all as "crap that's designed to look nice on TV." A friend had a recording made on his Ampex part of which was done with an experimental American pressure mic intended for high quality recording and another section with a "Telefunken" mic, actually a Scheops 201-M. No comparison, the American mic made all the instruments sound like they were made of paper boxes. The Schoeps mic is the one that actually established Telefunken's reputation and is the mic used for the Mercury Records "Living Presence" series. The cardioid used a ribbon element with a dynamic just under it. It has decent patterns in one plane going horizontally around the mic but, of course, there is no match whatsoever in the vertical plane and very poor directivity. Actually, Brush made a similar microphone in the mid or late 1930s, essentially an RCA Junior Velocity mic with a Brush crystal element fixed to the top of the ribbon and facing up. I suspect it had much the same problems. Brush used a rather complicated network to match the two sections. I don't think they made these for long. Actually, the WE 639 (later the Altec 639) used the same arrangement. It could be a figure-8, an omni, or a cardioid, but it only sounded even remotely decent as a figure-8 because the dynamic was just so awful. I thought all the Living Presence recordings were done with Telefunken condenser mikes? --scott It seems that many microphones designed for communication purposes had/have a haystack in the articulation range, i.e., rising above about 500 hz and peaking around 3 to 5 K. As you probably know most of the energy in the human voice is below about 500hz but the frequencies that contribute to articulation are around 1k to 3k. Good articulation can be had even if no frequencies below about 1500hz are included but naturalness requires some of the lower frequencies. The 639 dynamic element is the same as used in the 630A "Eight-Ball" and 633A/B "Saltshaker". The diaphragms were hard to make. They were annealed to get the hard spots out. John Frayne told me that there was more than a 50% rejection rate. Good ones sound decent many were not so good. Altec was not as careful as WE even though they had to meet WE specs. Doc Frayne told me that WE lost money on every 639 they made. It was a prestige item. The 639 was arranged with the moving coil element facing front where the American Mic had the element under the ribbon facing up. This makes sense if one thinks about the pattern in the horizontal plane only. The problem is that the moving coil mic is not truely omnidirectional due to the diffraction effects of the microphone case so there is no match or a very poor match in the vertical plane. The 639 actually has reasonably good discrimination in both planes because the directionality at high frequencies depends on diffraction effects rather than the phasing of the two elements, the ribbon is rolled off above about 3Khz. The 639 is a bit of a kluge but a very cleverly worked out one. BTW, the Marshall and Harry patent shows the moving coil element mounted _on top) of the ribbon, but facing forward. I think the revesed arrangement on the production mics was done for appearance. The case was a Raymond Lowey design and I think the mounting was compromised for appearance. The 630A was also expensive to make because it was complex. The case has two parts with a baffle and acoustical resistance between them. The 633 was an attempt to make a cheaper version. Altec made some plastic diaphragm versions of the same capsule which were also used for small tweeters. I don't know how they sounded in comparison to the metal diaphragm version. In general, I don't like moving coil microphones for high fidelity applications. They alsways sound mushy to me. They are eminently suitable for communications purposes because they are extremely rugged and can be made to have high output. Most moving coil mics rely on some sort of resonator at the high end to keep the response up. The 630A, which was thoroughly described in a paper in the Bell System Technical Journal, has a cavity resonator plus a capacitive resonator below the diaphragm. All these resonators combine to produce a very sharp cut-off at the high end and typically result in poor transient responce. The American mics do not sound very good because the moving coil elements are not very good. Again, metal diaphragms and rather poor transient response. The omnidirectional mic showed up on some of the local TV station, I remember seeing them on KTTV, but were no competition to Elecro-Voice who used molded plastic diaphragms and had pretty smooth response. I think American tried hard but simply did not have the technology to compete. The cardioid mics are also adjustable pattern, they have a board with jumpers under the label. I don't know a lot about the history of the company. I think I did read something or hear somethign about them long ago but its faded away. There were two other small microphone manufacturers in the Los Angeles area in the 1930s and 1940s, they were Universal Microphone Co, in Culver City and Carrier Microphone Co. I beleive Carrier was the superintendent of Universal. I am not sure of American Microphone personel had any relation to these companies but think they might have. American was in East LA at first but moved to Pasadena. Telefunken never built any microphones but acted as the marketing agency for both Neumann and Schoeps. I think they even marketed some AKG mics at one time. While Neumann mics, particularly the U-47 became famous under the Telefunken name the Mercury Living Presence series was apparently made using the Schoeps 201-M, a dual capsule cardioid/variable pattern mic. They are shown in some publicity photos of the sessions. Mercury used a single-mic pickup, somewhat unusual for American recording at the time. They also used modified Fairchild cutterheads. Mercury was one of the first recording companies to adopt hot stylus (orinated at Columbia) and variable pitch. The pitch variation was done by hand by the recording engineer following a marked up score. Not sure when the first automatic groove pitch machines came out but it must not have been much later. Meissner (SP ?) wrote a letter to Audio Engineering magazine after an article describing the Columbia Hot Stylus technique was published claiming he had developed a similar system in the late 1920s or early 1930s which he attempted to use at Brunswick. The management thought the resulting records looked funny and did not ever use it in practice. Hot stylus makes a lot of difference in both noise and in high frequency response where the original is made on laquer, perhaps less on wax but I am not certain of that. -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL |
#17
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On 4/2/2010 9:38 AM, Scott Dorsey wrote:
[Turner] Model 252. Low-Z version of the 250 with the lift switch (which I strongly discourage the use of). If you were using a Viking II you would probably want the 250 or to use a step-up transformer. --scott Hi By "lift switch" do you mean the switch contacts to complete the circuit to the mic element? Or did that mic include a switch on the bottom, so that when you pick it up, you transmit? 73, Ed Knobloch |
#18
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Edward Knobloch wrote:
On 4/2/2010 9:38 AM, Scott Dorsey wrote: [Turner] Model 252. Low-Z version of the 250 with the lift switch (which I strongly discourage the use of). If you were using a Viking II you would probably want the 250 or to use a step-up transformer. By "lift switch" do you mean the switch contacts to complete the circuit to the mic element? Or did that mic include a switch on the bottom, so that when you pick it up, you transmit? It's a switch on the bottom so you transmit when you pick up the mike. There is a locking switch that disables it, but the locking switch sometimes gets dislodged when the mike is knocked over. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#19
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On Apr 2, 2:09*am, "Richard Knoppow" wrote:
"Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... coffelt2 wrote: * * D-104C had a "ceramic" crystal element which was far more tolerant of moisture, shock, etc. I can't remember just now what the frequency response was (compared to the original) but when I used one, I was looked down upon as a traitor to tradition. You can no longer get either the original crystal element or the ceramic element, but Astatic will sell you a dynamic replacement. The dynamic is a whole lot smoother and less brittle sounding, but maybe that's a bad thing in a pileup. * * What was good about the D-104 types, was that you didn't have to speak directly into it. One could just walk around the shack, and in some instances, around the house with little loss of readability. They were very, very omnidirectional compared other communications mikes back then. *The good part of this was the effect you note. The bad part is that noise sources like fans and people yelling in the background were also very readable on the air. I am currently using an old Turner microphone and like the way it sounds. Also I am a fan of some of the older EV desk microphones, which still turn up cheaply at hamfests. * If you find a low-Z mike that you like, there is no reason you can't just stick a step-up transformer in the base to drive the Viking. --scott * * *There aren't many polar patterns published for cheaper mics but the directional properties of mics like the D-104 are mostly due to the diffraction around the body. At low frequencies they are almost perfectly omnidirectional but at some frequency begin to have some directionality which increases with frequency. The same diffraction effect causes a rise in the frequency response unless its compensated in some way. At a frequency where the path around the body approximates a half wave length the microphone can approach a super-carioide pattern, i.e., unidirectional with one or more lobes toward the back. The shape is important, a flat pancake shape like the D-104 will have a somewhat different pattern than a bullet-shaped mic. The ultimate was the Western Electric 630A "Eight-Ball". The spherical shape made it quite omnidirectional to rather high frequencies but the pattern was made even more uniform by the partial baffle mounted in front of the diaphragm. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer made some microphones using probably standard Western Electric condenser elements mounted in a spherical case to reduce the diffraction rise typical of the older mics. I don't remember whether these had baffles on them but the elements were mounted in a way that also tended to reduce the cavity resonance typical of both this and other large condenser type elements. In some respects the rise was useful in dialogue recording although it could also make some voices sound harsh. All sorts of mechanical filters and baffles were tried to aleviate this effect, mostly with limited success. Electrical filters, which would have been a better solution, while known in the telephone industry, were not very well known outside of it. Much of the early theory of electrical wave filters was developed by George A. Campbell, of Bell Labs, in the mid 'teens. This was cosidered very advanced stuff at the time. * * *I am not surprized that no one makes crystal or ceramic elements any more. For the most part microphones to fill similar applications now are electrets. -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks Richard and everyone else here. (For some reason my email wasn ´t "beeped" when these responses came so I am a bit behind and have some heavy reading to do here, but seems to be a wealth of important info here that i have to digest, then start the search engines to find an appropriate mic(s). Most Vikings I have seen have a D-104 with them but the specifics as to their innards of course is a guess. Thanks again and best 73s for now. Guess I better keep checking back here from time to time. 73s, Wayne |
#20
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![]() "SventheViking" wrote in message ... On Apr 2, 2:09 am, "Richard Knoppow" wrote: "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... coffelt2 wrote: D-104C had a "ceramic" crystal element which was far more tolerant of moisture, shock, etc. I can't remember just now what the frequency response was (compared to the original) but when I used one, I was looked down upon as a traitor to tradition. You can no longer get either the original crystal element or the ceramic element, but Astatic will sell you a dynamic replacement. The dynamic is a whole lot smoother and less brittle sounding, but maybe that's a bad thing in a pileup. What was good about the D-104 types, was that you didn't have to speak directly into it. One could just walk around the shack, and in some instances, around the house with little loss of readability. They were very, very omnidirectional compared other communications mikes back then. The good part of this was the effect you note. The bad part is that noise sources like fans and people yelling in the background were also very readable on the air. I am currently using an old Turner microphone and like the way it sounds. Also I am a fan of some of the older EV desk microphones, which still turn up cheaply at hamfests. If you find a low-Z mike that you like, there is no reason you can't just stick a step-up transformer in the base to drive the Viking. --scott There aren't many polar patterns published for cheaper mics but the directional properties of mics like the D-104 are mostly due to the diffraction around the body. At low frequencies they are almost perfectly omnidirectional but at some frequency begin to have some directionality which increases with frequency. The same diffraction effect causes a rise in the frequency response unless its compensated in some way. At a frequency where the path around the body approximates a half wave length the microphone can approach a super-carioide pattern, i.e., unidirectional with one or more lobes toward the back. The shape is important, a flat pancake shape like the D-104 will have a somewhat different pattern than a bullet-shaped mic. The ultimate was the Western Electric 630A "Eight-Ball". The spherical shape made it quite omnidirectional to rather high frequencies but the pattern was made even more uniform by the partial baffle mounted in front of the diaphragm. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer made some microphones using probably standard Western Electric condenser elements mounted in a spherical case to reduce the diffraction rise typical of the older mics. I don't remember whether these had baffles on them but the elements were mounted in a way that also tended to reduce the cavity resonance typical of both this and other large condenser type elements. In some respects the rise was useful in dialogue recording although it could also make some voices sound harsh. All sorts of mechanical filters and baffles were tried to aleviate this effect, mostly with limited success. Electrical filters, which would have been a better solution, while known in the telephone industry, were not very well known outside of it. Much of the early theory of electrical wave filters was developed by George A. Campbell, of Bell Labs, in the mid 'teens. This was cosidered very advanced stuff at the time. I am not surprized that no one makes crystal or ceramic elements any more. For the most part microphones to fill similar applications now are electrets. -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanks Richard and everyone else here. (For some reason my email wasn ´t "beeped" when these responses came so I am a bit behind and have some heavy reading to do here, but seems to be a wealth of important info here that i have to digest, then start the search engines to find an appropriate mic(s). Most Vikings I have seen have a D-104 with them but the specifics as to their innards of course is a guess. Thanks again and best 73s for now. Guess I better keep checking back here from time to time. 73s, Wayne As mentioned before while the D-104 was an excellent mic for ham use it was not the only one. _Any_ high impedance mic will work with the Viking, most have enough output. For good speech intelegibility in the presense of noise its desirable to favor the upper-mid frequencies, i.e., from about 1000 to 3000 hz since that is where the energy that carries the inteligence is. Most of the power is below 1000 hz, so a system with a cut off of around 300 hz and rising characteristic will put more of the modulation power in the range necessary for understandability. However, for naturalness you need some lows. Bell Labs, in their research for minimum bandwidths for telephone service found that inteligibility needs frequencies up to about 2800 hz but that, on the low end, it was found that voices were unnatural sounding unless the low end was extended to 250 or 300 hz. The phone company adopted a channel bandwidth of 2500 hz extending from 250hz to 2750hz. In fact, a wider bandwidth will sound better. On a noise-free channel wide-band, uncompressed speech has the best intelligibility but in the presense of noise band limited speech with spectrum shaping (fancy for rising frequency response) and compression or clipping, is more inteligible. A paper by Licklidder et.al, published in the _Journal of the Acoustical Society of America_ about 1948 reported experiments with _infinite_ speech clipping. Licklidder found that if speech was put through a differentiator (6db per octave high pass RC network) infinitely clipped (NO amplitude variations at all left) and then integrated (6db per octave RC low pass filter) the intelligibility was perserved and improved where the speech was competing with noise. In a quiet channel the unprocessed speech was better but the clipped speech still has something like an 80% articulation score. When in a very noisey channel the clipped speech maintained its score where untreated speech fell off severely. Lots of mics, both old and new, will work this this transmitter. -- -- Richard Knoppow Los Angeles WB6KBL |
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