Each mic went direct into an identical Sytek mic preamp and then right into the Lynx Aurora convertor. No other processing was used. Mic preamp gains were set to show the same level in pro tools. Tim Walsh, a fine drummer and recordist, delivered a compelling drum performance and then we listened to the results. This is obviously not a scientific test, and you might not even be personally inclined to use a mono ribbon mic as a front mic on a drum kit; that being said, a drum kit produces the most dynamic range and the greatest range of frequencies of any instrument, so it seems like a good way to get a quick handle on what one mic sounds like versus another mic.
Royer 121: Royer_121
Fathead II:Fathead_II
MXL R40 with EDCOR Transformer: MXL_R40_w_edcorTrans
Nady RSM4: Nady_RSM4
Out thoughts were as follows:
Royer 121: Sound is tight. Low end seems understated. The kick drum barely activated the sub in the GCR control room. Seems like some low end is not being reproduced. On the plus side, this mic brought out the body of the snare best. The snare felt much more three-dimensional. There was a good overall balance of kick, snare and hat. The noise floor was very low, barely over the noise floor of the (very quiet) preamp and convertor.
Fathead II: HUGE sub-bass. Exaggerated, in fact. The low end that you hear here was not present in the room when we made this recording. That being said, it sounded good. Somehow this mic is adding a ton of very low end. The high end is also slightly hyped – the cymbals have more shimmer. The snare seems to have no body – the snares themselves are prominent but the tone of the shell is missing. The toms sound much more prominent and present with this mic. Noise-wise, it is pretty quiet, although there is a very very slight hum – sounds like 60hz.
MXL R40 w/ EDCOR transformer: Much more bass response than the Royer, although this sub-bass is deeper in pitch and less prominent in level than the Fathead II produced. The kick feels very present and in-your-face; the rest of the kit feels like it’s on a slightly different plane further back. Noise-wise this mic was the best: it is absolutely dead quiet.
Nady RSM4: This seemed to split the difference between the Royer and the MXL. The Nady puts the cymbals much more forward then the other mics. Noise-wise this mic was by far the worst, with a prominent 180 hz hum present.
Listen closely and draw your own conclusions. My takeaway: the modded MXL R40 is gaining a permanent place in the studio mic locker, along side ribbons costing as much as 20x its modest price. And I am not going to be putting the Royer on any source that needs to deliver real low-end in a mix.
You can buy all of these mics online at a variety of retailers. I purchased my Royer at Vintage King, the Fathead II came from Sonic Circus, the Nady and the MXL were both purchased from Musician’s Friend. FYI I have no idea if these places offer the lowest price or not.
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Really an excellent post! I love Fathead II.. with the correct amount of compression that must sound super fat.
the MXL R40 w/ EDCOR transformer sounded good but seemed to dip out in the mid highs. i'm looking for a ribbon great for vocals and it seems to dip out just in that range? or maybe not if leveled properly for voice... hmmm. i don't know.
Thanks for doing this - these types of comparisons are very helpful. That MXL seems like a steal. Does the transformer just give you lower noise and more gain, or does it also significantly affect the tonality? If so, how?
I am looking for something to use for cranked-up tube amps. Would the Nady's noisiness be less of a problem for that application?
Again, thanks. This is very helpful.
RE: tonality, listen to the clips and be the judge yrself. that's why i post the clips rather than just give my opinion. You can decide. I would not recommend the NADY mic to anyone. c.
David, as i read this now, i realize that you had posted yr question to a subsequent MXL article. I was confused. In my original MXL article you can hear the comparison of the stock R40 versus the mod'd R40. Visit: https://www.preservationsound.com/?p=3687
Blind listened these files. The one I kept diggin on was the Nady! I'm getting one.
I can't fathom how the Royer can cost so much...