I know that you should warm-up both S/S and tube amps and outboard.
Do phantom-powered mics benefit from warm-up, also?
Specifically, I have a few Chinese LDC's and a C-1000S. Will a warm-up help preserve the circuitry, stabalize the sound, etc.?
Do P-Powered Mics Need Warm-up?
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- zen recordist
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On a tech level, I dunno. I have never noticed a difference with a properly set up, fully functioning condenser mic as to how long i need to wait before singing...
I have never flipped phantom on and then hit record immediately, and the 29 seconds before we even do anything seems to be enough....
I dont know about longevity other than I doubt highly that any kind of "warm up" or stabilization period is needed for phantom power.
Hopefully a tech type person will either tell me i am an idiot and i have been doing it wrong for 100 years or not....
I have never flipped phantom on and then hit record immediately, and the 29 seconds before we even do anything seems to be enough....
I dont know about longevity other than I doubt highly that any kind of "warm up" or stabilization period is needed for phantom power.
Hopefully a tech type person will either tell me i am an idiot and i have been doing it wrong for 100 years or not....
I can only claim experience with tube guitar amps, but have noticed that the sound is "better" (thicker, richer?) when a tube amp has heated up for at least a half hour. Also, the sound becomes more stable, in the harmonic and tone sense.
I feel the same about the various cheap microphone pre-amps I use, but that is even more subjective, and may just be psychosomatic.
But like tubes work better and sound different warm vs. cold, and sound again different when real hot, I suspect that capacitators and maybe even chips have different sonic properties after a warm-up.
That said, phantom power is so low it might be the case that heat is barely a factor, although I wonder if the caps' "sonic properties" change a bit after they get power.
I feel the same about the various cheap microphone pre-amps I use, but that is even more subjective, and may just be psychosomatic.
But like tubes work better and sound different warm vs. cold, and sound again different when real hot, I suspect that capacitators and maybe even chips have different sonic properties after a warm-up.
That said, phantom power is so low it might be the case that heat is barely a factor, although I wonder if the caps' "sonic properties" change a bit after they get power.
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- zen recordist
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Everything changes once the piece of gear stabilzes, i know that, and hear it daily when i turn on some old tube thingy....
Phantom though... I dont think so, or at least it stabilizes quickly enough to be a non issue. IMO, if you have someting that takes more than 15 minutes to really be stable, re-cap it....
Phantom though... I dont think so, or at least it stabilizes quickly enough to be a non issue. IMO, if you have someting that takes more than 15 minutes to really be stable, re-cap it....
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