I came to watch the process and loved it. Very well done. However, understanding your main concern was $$$ it is a little funny that you spent so much time and money on this! Could have grabbed a used WA-87 R2 for prob $450. No machine work, no hunting down parts, no wasted Behringer B-2, no wasted time! If you're doing it for the love of DIY I can absolutely see why you went down this road though. This was a really cool project!
Thanks gang! You're so right, it would've been cheaper. I was in college at the time (before leaving to focus on music) and they had a program where they would give you $300 to work on a project, so I spent like $250 out of pocket :)
You quickly come to understand that the difference the sound that is recorded are close to nil..People are geeking out on microphones but they use a cheap pre-amp to record their shizzle...The old Neve consoles had a deadly voltage for the tubes etc, this will give you a much huger and richer sound. When you record at home I found that better way to go is to choose between the different kind of microphone, say dynamic or ribbon vs condenser, but more often the condernse sound brittle and thin and does not sit well in the mix unless you cut away much of the high end brittleness and there for a dynamic sound much better even a ribbon sounds more round and can take a little boost here and there when using EQ.
Great vid! So the whole set of components from the vintage mic store turned out bad? Was there a difference in components that were used? Also, what JFETs did you use in each build? That can be a big issue for some of this. Thanks!
Freaking wicked build! I might be interested in the behringer's stock capsule. Any chance you'd be willing to send it over to aid a dude's 'scrap' project? Keep it up man 👍
Creamy mids, soft highs, super present lows that can easily get boomy/boxy. Its a great mic that beats out more expensive options, every artist I record seems to love it on guitar, sounds very realistic. It has a signature "wetness" compared to most mics. Where it's unlike a u87 is how loose the low-mids sound, doesn't have the signature tight low-mids of the real thing. For vocals, I have to battle the lows and wield off-axis placements, but the fight is well worth the color and the price point. Unbelievable voice over mic.
I came to watch the process and loved it. Very well done. However, understanding your main concern was $$$ it is a little funny that you spent so much time and money on this! Could have grabbed a used WA-87 R2 for prob $450. No machine work, no hunting down parts, no wasted Behringer B-2, no wasted time! If you're doing it for the love of DIY I can absolutely see why you went down this road though. This was a really cool project!
Thanks gang! You're so right, it would've been cheaper. I was in college at the time (before leaving to focus on music) and they had a program where they would give you $300 to work on a project, so I spent like $250 out of pocket :)
Really nice to see all the steps there. It also shows how much effort you put into it. Glad you mentioned all the help as well :)
Nice. It was great to see someone fabricate their own mic body. 👍
Thank you! It fucking sucked lol :)
the amazing work deserves some respect for sure
Subscribe then bro 🙏🙏
Thank you! Means a lot gang!
You quickly come to understand that the difference the sound that is recorded are close to nil..People are geeking out on microphones but they use a cheap pre-amp to record their shizzle...The old Neve consoles had a deadly voltage for the tubes etc, this will give you a much huger and richer sound. When you record at home I found that better way to go is to choose between the different kind of microphone, say dynamic or ribbon vs condenser, but more often the condernse sound brittle and thin and does not sit well in the mix unless you cut away much of the high end brittleness and there for a dynamic sound much better even a ribbon sounds more round and can take a little boost here and there when using EQ.
Respect to DIY master 🙂
Really good effort!
Would love to hear how it sounds! Great work putting it together
you hear it the whole video
Great vid! So the whole set of components from the vintage mic store turned out bad? Was there a difference in components that were used? Also, what JFETs did you use in each build? That can be a big issue for some of this. Thanks!
I totally messed up the first PCB's. I forget which JFET's rn, if i have a chance I will check
Good build, though a lot of effort. Thanks for the video 😀👍
Freaking wicked build! I might be interested in the behringer's stock capsule. Any chance you'd be willing to send it over to aid a dude's 'scrap' project? Keep it up man 👍
To much effort keep it up❤
Thank you!
How did manage to peak at over 500?? This project is about 250 tops
I love spending money
nice bro
Thanks for this video bro ! I try to do the same 🙏🏽🔥
lmk how it goes!
I have the same type of microphone and I want to upgrade it :))
How long did it take to receive your PCBs?
Has anyone tried the Roswell k87 mics? They use the same capsule but they order the body from China and then assemble them in California.
Creamy mids, soft highs, super present lows that can easily get boomy/boxy. Its a great mic that beats out more expensive options, every artist I record seems to love it on guitar, sounds very realistic. It has a signature "wetness" compared to most mics. Where it's unlike a u87 is how loose the low-mids sound, doesn't have the signature tight low-mids of the real thing. For vocals, I have to battle the lows and wield off-axis placements, but the fight is well worth the color and the price point. Unbelievable voice over mic.
wait so you were using the mic to make this video?