I had expected the red thing on the rear of this Amperite RB ribbon mic to be a simple on-off switch:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi577Hnlb5ecH55uEb02w4iP44VCZeQoRvsbv2KotdudxH54T97Ht7x8KWI6oYH-UjLNqdnCMtpRSJFE5vbQdKBFomtkGss7b4hL5tqgVKSRlvzZh0BL-z_UHykmOaJQgCUQkjOKTAEzzk/s320/Amperite_2.jpg) |
Amperite RB - switch on rear |
In fact the knob is connected to a cloth-covered metal plate which slides up and down, blocking the rear of the mic. This is a mechanical method of altering both the pickup pattern and the frequency response.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgd8jjS_ZQzVKtkybTQ-X_vl2wyQxLcWKfOoL-NxB9WyUfiT1O9G-fXkqgEfOys3e5fWQ_y6afok6KMI2GNAk836Kd_bFC5EvJftodnsoR9M8UHkyBRySGNK_BC68r3CsYHhzNNGmS3_ok/s320/Amperite_1.jpg) |
Inside the Amperite - sliding plate, blurry photo :-( |
When open, the mic will be a normal figure-8 pattern. Closing the vent will reduce pickup at the rear, and also make the mic sound brighter by reducing the proximity effect.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgj-M9ayweMYAOAZZWRsnVnTQ3-2DmE569UR8e9H7QfGUwz1nEm_6b4olr86FZf1xOchNNWswTAlDBQyf2RfB0wa7t3C4Oz_YMo7RdRAZ9El1m5IXZyycK2LRIJ85MRAj-nOdXFSGySdMs/s320/1.jpg) |
Open and…. |
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhkEvezO5WmfrQ9fN0QLw_9pgK8YUTWDh54OLVftp47ROLygghVxiA0U3Is4v2_wdP5K1nCnHSmdvD1NaUDWtK6elLE4F1yR4wylLHsAn2nDHZTmIapzijcTLnPJgZV8lBTvRyDwWmWz-Y/s320/2.jpg) |
… closed |
The mechanism is not as sophisticated as, for example, an RCA 77DX, but at least they made an early effort to offer engineers a new flavour.
Well done Amperite!
No comments:
Post a Comment
Post a comment!
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.