Showing posts with label Recording Instrument. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Recording Instrument. Show all posts

Saturday, December 19, 2015

A SHORT HISTORY OF THE MICROPHONE

A SHORT HISTORY OF THE MICROPHONE - The microphone pervades our daily lives through the sound we hear on radio, television and recordings, paging in public spaces, and of course
in two-way communications via telephone. In this chapter we will touch upon some of the highlights of more than 125 years of microphone development, observing in particular how most of the first 50 of these years were without the benefits of electronic amplification. The requirements 
of telephony, radio broadcast, general communications, and recording are also discussed, leading to some conjecture on future requirements.

As children, many of us were fascinated with strings stretched between the ends of a pair of tin cans or wax paper cups, with their ability to convey speech over a limited distance. This was a purely mechano-acoustical arrangement in which vibrations generated at one end were transmitted
along the string to actuate vibrations at the other end. In 1876, Alexander Graham Bell received US patent 174,465 on the scheme shown in Figure 1–1. Here, the mechanical string was, in a sense,
replaced by a wire that conducted electrical direct current, with audio signals generated and received via a moving armature transmitter and its associated receiver. Like the mechanical version, the system was reciprocal.

Transmission was possible in either direction; however, thepatent also illustrates the acoustical advantage of a horn to increase the driving pressure at the sending end and a complementary inverted horn to reinforce output pressure at the ear at the receiving end. Bell’s further experiments with the transmitting device resulted in the liquid transmitter, shown in Figure 1–2, which was demonstrated at the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition of 1876. Here, the variable contact principle
provided a more effective method of electrical signal modulation than that afforded by the moving armature.

The variable contact principle was extended by Berliner in a patent application in 1877 in which a steel ball was placed against a stretched metal diaphragm, as shown in Figure 1–3. Further work in this area was done by Blake (patents 250, 126 through 250, 129, issued in 1881), who used a platinum bead impressed against a hard carbon disc as the variable resistance element, as shown in Figure 1–4. The measured response of the Blake device spanned some 50 decibels over the frequency range from 380Hz to 2000Hz, and thus fell far short of the desired response. However, it provided a more efficient method of modulating telephone signals than earlier designs and became a standard in the Bell system for some years. 

Another interim step in the development of loose contact modulation of direct current was developed in 1878 by Hughes and is shown in Figure 1–5. In this embodiment, very slight changes in the curvature of the thin wood plate diaphragm, caused by impinging sound waves, gave rise to a fairly large fluctuation in contact resistance between the carbon rod and the two mounting points. This microphone was used by Clement Ader (Scientific American, 1881) in his pioneering two-channel transmissionsvfrom the stage of the Paris Opera to a neighboring space. It wasvHughes, incidentally, who first used the term microphone, as applied to electroacoustical devices.

 The ultimate solution to telephone transmitters came with the development of loose carbon granule elements as typified by Blake’s transmitter of 1888, shown in Figure 1–6. Along with the moving armature receiver, the loose carbon granule transmitter, or microphone, has dominated telephony up to the present. Quite a testimony to the inventiveness and resourcefulness of engineers working nearly 130 years ago.
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Saturday, December 12, 2015

The Elements of Sound and Audio Recording




The Elements of Sound and Audio Recording - Audio recording is the recording of sound. It is the act of capturing the physical dimensions of sound and then reproducing those dimensions either immediately or from a storage medium (magnetic, vinyl, electronic, digital), and thereby returning those dimensions to their physical, acoustic
state. The process moves from physical sound, through the recording/ reproduction chain, and back to physical sound.

The “art” in recording centers on the artistically sensitive application of the recording process. The recording process is being used to shape or create sound as an artistic statement (piece of music), or supporting artistic material. To be in control of crafting the artistic product, one must be in control
of the recording process, be in control of the ways in which the recording

process modifi es sound, and be in control of communicating well-defi ned  creative ideas. These areas of control of the artistic process all closely involve a human interaction with sound. Inconsistencies between the various states of sound  are present throughout the audio-recording process. Many of these inconsistencies are the result of the human factor: the ways in which humans
perceive sound and interpret or formulate its meanings. In order for material to be under their control, the artist (audio professional) must understand the substance of their material: sound, in all its inconsistencies.
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Thursday, December 3, 2015

Condenser Microphone

Condenser Microphone  - Microphone is a transducer acoustic-to-electric sensors used transform and change the sound signals into electrical signals. In principle, the microphone is a system of vibration of the membrane, which vibrates due to the membrane exposed to sound pressure. Microphone have many different types, some types are classified by the transduction system. Condenser microphones and dynamic microphones are two of the examples that many people use the microphone.

Condenser Microphone
Condenser Microphone
Condenser microphone is a microphone that works with the principle of keeping parallel capacitor, or the difference in capacitance between the charged plate. The membrane is very thin on the microphone and made of plate or metal. Behind there is membrane electrode made of metal as well, the two plates are separated by a column of air.

When the membrane exposed to sound field, the membrane will vibrate, the vibration of the membrane will change the distance of plate, or column of air between the plate that resulted in the emergence of differences in capacitance. Then the difference described as disappointing as electrical signals.

Dynamic microphones are often also called electromagnetic microphone, because it works based on these principles. A wire coil made of a very small email attached to the membrane and placed in a magnetic field. Vibration caused by because of the membrane exposed to sound field will move the coil in a magnetic field, the emergence of electric current response as the voice signal.
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