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Is there a dynamic mic that doesn't roll off at the 80hz area that can capture a deeper low end like a condenser in omni? Thinking of room sound mic placement etc. I looked at the RE20 but it tends to roll off as well. We know they can go deep seeing as most kick mics are dynamic
Hi Jason, great question! A kick drum mic may work for what you’re describing, but we would really need more detail on your application in order to best recommend the tool for the job. Feel free to give us a call and we can go into more detail to help you make the right choice. Thanks! Jason Filloramo, Sweetwater Sales Engineer, (800) 222-4700 ext. 1281, Jason_Filloramo@sweetwater.com
no need to pretend - Thin film, connected to a coil which moves in and out with variation of air pressure (sound wave). This sits within a permanent magnetic field and so a voltage is produced which can be amplified within the microphone or by pre-amp or amplifier. But he said he more elegantly than I write :)))
@@iainmackenzieUK There's a big difference between knowing what the words mean, and actually understanding how it works. Kind of like how we all know the basic principles of how a car engine works, but how many people can actually build a car engine. I understand the basic idea that coils and magnets create an electromagnetic field, but I have no idea why, or how when all these pieces are put together can reproduce the exact sound of my voice.
@@manicmisfit1206 well, as a teacher of physics, I can tell you. :) Briefly - the coil of wire which is attached to the thin, paper diaphragm will (like your ear drum) vibrate as the sound reaches it. The coil moving near to the magnet creates a fluctuating emf (voltage). The shape of the changing voltage is the same as the shape of the incoming sound wave. That voltage can now be amplified and then recorded or used to make a loudspeaker vibrate with the same shape pattern as the incoming sound. (The loudspeaker works in just the same way as the microphone - but in reverse - ie the voltage in the loudspeaker coil makes the diaphragm move and create a sound wave) Hope that helps :)
@@iainmackenzieUK Haha, when I wrote my comment I figured that you were probably educated on the topic. And as someone who is not a physicist, but can still basically understand what you're talking about, I think the original commenters point still stands in that most people in the comment section will probably only pretend to know what he's talking about in the video.