The three main issues that I have had with them are:1: Almost universally I found myself having to apply quite heavy cuts in the 120 - 230hz region to compensate for a very obvious resonance there that would otherwise act to blur a lot of higher frequencies and make voices sound obviously muddy.2: Sibilance (when present) was often 'smeary' and difficult to isolate as it would occur at several harmonics making harshness a problem - it almost seams counterintuitive but this harshness often made it difficult to bring 'airiness' and 'detail' into voices. You would almost expect a harsh mic to have detail but I often found myself thinking that vocals sounded harsh and lacking detail.3: I found the midrange difficult to sculpt.
My experience with these mics is the most likely components to fail are the tantalum caps in the power supply circuits. Always check the power rails first on these mics first or you may be following a false trail.
Measure the oscillator output before the series resistors, those are large values and will attenuate the voltage from a high impedance. Most DVM's are 20 meg ohms or less input impedance so they will show a lower reading if you measure after those series resistors on the output of the oscillator.
I am getting a lower output from my eb than I am from a friends eb p48 - about 6 or so db and I would have thought it would be the other way around because of the relatively lower voltages being fed to the capsule on the eb p48. Is that normal?Thanks,Mike
No, that suggests a reduced polarization voltage. The P-48 model has no oscillator, it's like an original U-87 taking the phantom voltage to the capsule, at a reduced level. Usually it's around 42 volts or so after all the series resistors and such. That is why the P-48 414 is about 5 db less output than an older 414 EB. Those use the internal oscillator to raise the polarization voltage to 60~62 volts.