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Variable Pattern Mic
A microphone in which the polar pattern can be adjusted. The adjustment may be in the form of a switch that switches between two or more common patterns such as omnidirectional, cardioid, supercardioid, hypercardioid, figure-8, and possibly some settings in between, or it can sometimes be a knob that provides a continuous adjustment. In most cases a variable pattern mic is made by placing two condenser diaphragms back to back, and then regulating the way the signals from them are combined inside the mic. Depending upon the exact construction, and the quality (and matching) of components a particular pattern may not always behave in exactly the same fashion as a mic with a fixed pattern. Nevertheless they are very widely used because the flexibility and overall usefulness of having multiple patterns often outweighs any minor discrepancy in the accuracy of the polar pattern. In fact, some of these inconsistencies can work to an engineer's advantage if he or she understands how to apply them.
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Microphone Mysteries Revealed by Senior Sales Engineer, Ted Hunter - Benefits of variable polar patterns.
Variable polar patterns can actually be good for several things. Before we go into them, we should probably briefly discuss what the main polar patterns are. The three "main" polar patterns are cardioid (or unidirectional), figure-eight (or bidirectional), and omnidirectional. You can find more detailed descriptions in our Word for the Day archives, but in a nutshell a cardioid microphone picks up sound from the "front" only. A figure-eight microphone picks up sound from the front and rear of the microphone. An omnidirectional microphone picks up sound from all around. There are also a few polar patterns that fall between cardioid and figure eight that are supercardioid and hypercardioid. The supercardoid pattern has more side rejection than cardioid...in other words, it's even more directional...but there's a little more pickup from the rear. The hypercardioid pattern offers even more side rejection, but there's even more pickup from the rear. If you look at the patterns side by side you'll see a "progression" from cardioid to supercardioid to hypercardioid to figure-eight where the side rejection gets better but the lobe in the back grows until pickup from the front and back is equal and the rejection on the sides is almost complete.

So now that we know what they are, what are they good for? Well, first of all there are the obvious advantages that apply to certain situations. The cardioid pattern is by far the most used, especially in the studio; as for the most part people point a microphone at a source and record it. However, if you want to pick up, say, a group of background singers, the omnidirectional pattern would be the most appropriate as it picks up sound from all around. It's also useful if you want to pick up the sound of the room you're recording in, such as when you're using a microphone as room microphone for drums or when you're recording an orchestra in a nice-sounding hall. Likewise, a figure-eight microphone may be useful when you're recording two people singing together who want to face each other as they do so. They're also good for picking up the sound of a room as they pick up more of the sound in the room than a cardioid microphone, although not as much as an omni. Also, as mentioned earlier, the figure-eight pattern offers nearly complete rejection of sound coming in from the sides, so if you're ever in a situation where you want to pick up as little of something as possible...say, a computer in a small home studio, or a certain instrument in an ensemble recording...you'll do the best job or rejecting that sound aiming the side of a microphone with the figure-eight pattern at the sound you want to reject.

In addition to those obvious differences, there are some less-obvious advantages to using certain patterns in certain situations. For instance, an omnidirectional microphone exhibits little or no proximity effect, so if you have to have the microphone extremely close to a source and you want it to avoid the buildup of low frequencies that's inherent with a directional microphone, an omnidirectional pattern would be a good choice. In fact, the omnidirectional pattern tends to offer the most natural sound all around as it doesn't have the off-axis coloration that's a byproduct of directional patterns, which employ mechanical or electrical mechanisms to cancel out off-axis sounds. Not that that's a bad thing...in fact, switching patterns on a microphone is often a good alternative to changing the color of the sound without resorting to equalization. Most variable-pattern microphones will include frequency response charts for each of the patterns the microphone can be switched to as well as graphs that show the response to different frequencies with different patterns. All microphones, for instance, become more omnidirectional at lower frequencies and more directional at higher frequencies...just to varying degrees. Also, different patterns are required for certain stereo microphone techniques, such as Blumelein, M/S, even Decca Tree configurations.

Finally, it's probably a good idea to mention a few differences between variable-pattern microphones and fixed-pattern microphones. Most of what we've discussed here applies to both, but there are a few differences. First off, there are obviously some advantages to variable-pattern microphones. As mentioned, not only will the pickup pattern vary as the different patterns are selected, but the frequency response and color will change as well, and it can be very handy to be able to try different colors without having to switch microphones out. Some microphones offer just two or three patterns, some offer a few more intermediate steps, and some have continuously variable patterns, which can be great for dialing in specific sounds. Multipattern microphones typically are condenser microphones with two capsules back-to-back, and the different patterns are achieved by applying different amounts of power to one or both diaphragms (as well as switching polarity for certain patterns). As such, a multipattern microphone set to the omnidirectional polar pattern...which is basically two cardioids back-to-back...may still exhibit a small amount of proximity effect. Also, as mentioned earlier, all microphones become more and more directional at frequency increases, so while a "true" omnidirectional microphone's pickup pattern will approach that of a cardioid at higher frequencies, a variable-pattern microphone's response will approach that of a figure-eight microphone when set to omnidirectional. Also, depending on the level of quality control employed by the microphone manufacturer, the front and back capsules may sound quite different from one another, which could especially be a problem when using figure-eight microphones in a Blumlein or M/S configuration.
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