• Re: Does anybody sell pre-made resistor "gizmos" for sm57/58 mics?

    From Tatonik@21:1/5 to Mike Rivers on Wed Nov 29 12:52:15 2023
    On 9/15/20 9:35 AM, Mike Rivers wrote:
    On 9/15/2020 10:12 AM, slinkp wrote:
    I'd like to try the shunt resistor trick, as per eg. that old Paul
    Stamler article, but i have no idea where my soldering kit has got to,
    and exercising my soldering skills (terrible) is no longer on my list
    of "fun things to do

    So if there's a place or person that sells eg. an XLR barrel with a
    suitable resistor already correctly wired into it, I'd happily buy one.

    This isn't the sort of thing that becomes a commercial product, though
    you might find some on this newsgroup or some other recording-related
    forum who will volunteer to make one for you for cost and shipping.

    I would, but I won't - because the 600 ohm resistor that Paul came up
    with for his article was the best compromise, as evaluated by his
    students, for the mic, preamp, and source. Different resistors sounded different and may sound better than 600 ohms (or no resistor) on a
    different source.

    The other thing - and maybe now that I think about it, it might not be a
    600 ohm resistor after all, but a different value - is that what they
    really determined. This is the load on the microphone, which equals the preamp's input impedance with a resistor in parallel that total 600
    ohms. I may not have the number right, but that's the principle.

    Paul conducted his experiment using a preamp that he designed and built himself, so your preamp will be different.

    If you want to experiment with varying the load on a microphone, I'd
    suggest that you give some consideration to buying a Cloudlifter Z. It's
    a pre-preamp with a built-in variable load resistor. Even with the load resistor switched out, the Cloudlifter will make your SM57 sound better,
    and you can fiddle with the variable load to see how (and if) it affects
    what you're recording.

    https://www.cloudmicrophones.com/cloudlifter-cl-z

    Unfortunately it costs about $250 new, but they're available on the used market.

    I realize this is an old thread and that Mike Rivers is no longer with
    us, but I've recently become interested in messing around with this
    concept with some different mics and preamps. Soldering isn't among my
    skills, although I might summon the courage to try it at some point. In
    the meantime, I happened to come across another device and was wondering
    if anyone had thoughts on it. It has been around over a decade but I
    wasn't aware of it until recently.

    Magento Audio Labs ML-V01 VariOhm Mic and Preamp Matching Processor

    https://www.magnetoaudiolabs.com/product-page/magneto-audio-labs-ml-v01-variohm-mic-and-preamp-matching-processor

    It's described as passive. A spokesman in a video interview at an old
    trade show indicated that it uses a transformer. Does that mean it
    probably wouldn't be as audibly clean as simply soldering a resistor
    between the pins of an XLR cable?

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  • From geoff@21:1/5 to Tatonik on Thu Nov 30 08:58:56 2023
    On 30/11/2023 7:52 am, Tatonik wrote:


    I realize this is an old thread and that Mike Rivers is no longer with
    us, but I've recently become interested in messing around with this
    concept with some different mics and preamps.  Soldering isn't among my skills, although I might summon the courage to try it at some point.  In
    the meantime, I happened to come across another device and was wondering
    if anyone had thoughts on it.  It has been around over a decade but I
    wasn't aware of it until recently.

    Magento Audio Labs ML-V01 VariOhm Mic and Preamp Matching Processor

    https://www.magnetoaudiolabs.com/product-page/magneto-audio-labs-ml-v01-variohm-mic-and-preamp-matching-processor

    It's described as passive.  A spokesman in a video interview at an old
    trade show indicated that it uses a transformer.  Does that mean it
    probably wouldn't be as audibly clean as simply soldering a resistor
    between the pins of an XLR cable?

    Depends on the quality of the transformer, but any transformer will have
    losses of some sort that a simple resistor won't.

    geoff

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