A type of velocity microphone. A velocity microphone responds to the velocity of air molecules passing it rather than the Sound Pressure Level, which is what most other microphones respond to. In many cases this functional difference isn’t important, but it can certainly be an issue on a windy day. Very old ribbon mics could be destroyed from the air velocity created just by carrying them across a room. A ribbon mic works by loosely suspending a small element (usually a corrugated strip of metal) in a strong magnetic field. This “ribbon” is moved by the action of air molecules and when it moves it cuts across the magnetic lines of flux causing a signal to be generated. Naturally ribbon mics have a figure 8 pick up pattern. You can think of it like a window blind; it is easily moved by wind blowing at it, but usually doesn’t move when wind blows across it from left to right. Ribbon mics were the first commercially successful directional microphones.
Related Articles:
Max for Live + Ableton Extensions: What Every Producer Should Know
1
Max for Live + Ableton Extensions: What Every Producer Should Know
Why Your Church Needs EFNOTE eKits
2
Why Your Church Needs EFNOTE eKits
The New Era of DJing? AlphaTheta CDJ-1500X Revealed!
3
The New Era of DJing? AlphaTheta CDJ-1500X Revealed!
The Legend Is BACK | EQD Bellows Jr. Demo
4
The Legend Is BACK | EQD Bellows Jr. Demo
Inside Martin Guitar’s Museum & the Four Sweetwater-exclusive Instruments It Inspired
5
Inside Martin Guitar’s Museum & the Four Sweetwater-exclusive Instruments It Inspired
Best Lightweight Guitar Amps
6
Best Lightweight Guitar Amps
Fender ’62 Deluxe Reissue: Everything You Need to Know
7
Fender ’62 Deluxe Reissue: Everything You Need to Know
How to Upgrade Your Microphones for Better Worship Sound
8
How to Upgrade Your Microphones for Better Worship Sound
Inspiration. Information. Passion.
Being music makers ourselves, we love geeking out on all things gear. From the tweakiest techniques to the biggest ideas, our experts work hard to constantly supply inSync with a steady stream of helpful, in-depth demos, reviews, how-tos, news, and interviews. With over 28,000 articles and counting, inSync is your FREE resource for breaking news, reviews, demos, interviews, and more.