Microphone placement & tone quality – VocoPro UHF-3800 User Manual

Page 6

Advertising
background image

Microphone Placement & Tone Quality

Lead & Backup Vocals

Lips should be less than 3" from or even touching the windscreen on an axis to the microphone.
Doing this creates a robust sound, emphasizes bass and provides maximum isolation from
other sources.

Speech

When giving a speech or simply speaking, place the microphone 4" to 10" away from the mouth, just
above nose height for a natural sound with reduced bass. You can also place the microphone
8" to 16" away from the mouth, slightly off to one side, for a more "distant" sound with highly
reduced bass and minimal "s" sounds.

Microphone Position

The UHF-3800 is ideal for close-up vocals and can be held in the hand or mounted on a mic stand.The

most common applications and placement techniques are listed below. Keep in mind that microphone

technique is largely a matter of personal taste, there is no one "correct" microphone position.

Proximity Effect

When the sound source is less than 1/4 in. from the microphone, the microphone boosts bass

frequencies (by 6 to 10 dB at 100 Hz), creating a warmer and richer bass sound than when farther

away. This effect, known as proximity effect, happens only in unidirectional dynamic microphones

like the UHF-3800.

Feedback

Feedback occurs when the amplified sound from any loudspeaker reenters the sound system through

any open microphone and is amplified again and again and again. Most commonly, feedback is caused

by the following conditions: placing loudspeakers too close to microphones, having too many open

active microphones, boosting tone controls indiscriminately (mainly treble) and performing in areas

with high ratios of room surfaces that have hard and reflective surfaces such as glass, marble and

wood. What to do if feedback occurs before the sound system is loud enough?

Request that the talker speak louder into the microphone.

Reduce the distance from the talker to the microphone. Each time this distance is halved, the sound

system output will increase by 6dB.

Reduce the number of open microphones.

Move the loudspeaker farther away from the microphone. Each time this distance is doubled, the

sound system output can be increased by 6dB.

Move the loudspeaker closer to the listener.

Use an equalizer/feedback reducer to cut the frequency bands in which the feedback occurs.

Microphone Basics

5

Advertising