C12 Microphone

If there ever was an amplifier that exemplified classic, hi-fidelity sound, it would be the Austrian-designed C12 Microphone. Initially created by AKG Acoustics in 1953, the C12 is venerated for its smooth, vaporous recurrence reaction. The plan of the C12 was interesting in its inaccessible capsule polarizing innovation. The capacity to alter the capsule’s polar reaction dynamically between cardioid, omnidirectional and figure 8 (and six halfway designs between) from the control supply rather than with switches on board the receiver made the C12 one of the most flexible huge stomach tube amplifiers of its time.

C12 Microphone is nice.

It is considered by many to be the finest sounding mouthpiece ever created. Many people still use today unique C12 mouthpieces in recording studios all through the world. The huge diaphragm vacuum tube-based C12 is a phenomenal choice for all sorts of disobedient sounds. Consequently it lends itself particularly well to drum overheads, acoustic guitar, and vocals. Its sleek smooth beat conclusion gives a bounty of discussion without sounding unforgiving or manufactured. Furthermoe, its midrange talks clearly and articulately, capturing the source with a characteristic nearness. Its moo conclusion is tight and centred, flawlessly adjusted with the rest of the recurrence run.

At the heart of each C12 receiver is our pined for CK12 capsule, handcrafted in-house by experienced specialists with fastidious consideration to detail. A long time of work went into reverse-engineering this amazing capsule plan, with backplates machined to coordinate the firsts and stomachs tuned and stuck by hand. The intensifier circuit utilizes a German-made Haufe T14 yield transformer built to coordinate the initial, driven by a mouthpiece review 6072a vacuum tube. Our circuit plan builds upon the first with the execution of cathode self-biasing operation, an arrangement that is calmer, more steady over the lifetime of the tube, and requires less control supply calibration than the initial fixed-bias arrangement.

Image: Telefunken