16-bit mono wav files. Use the grey arrow on the right. Go get coffee.
Nice cardioid condenser. Not at all peaked like the TLM 103. Smoother,
thicker. Curiously capable even in front of the sound hole.
http://idisk.mac.com/tyreeford-Public/Neumann%20TLM%20102?view=web
16-bit wav files. Use the grey arrow on the right. Go get coffee.
Nice job, Berlin.
Regards,
Ty Ford
--Audio Equipment Reviews Audio Production Services
Acting and Voiceover Demos http://www.tyford.com
Guitar player?:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yWaPRHMGhGA
>16-bit wav files. Use the grey arrow on the right. Go get coffee.
No broadband where you live, Ty?
d
>Hey,
>
>16-bit mono wav files. Use the grey arrow on the right. Go get coffee.
>
>Nice cardioid condenser. Not at all peaked like the TLM 103. Smoother,
>thicker. Curiously capable even in front of the sound hole.
>
>http://idisk.mac.com/tyreeford-Public/Neumann%20TLM%20102?view=web
>
>16-bit wav files. Use the grey arrow on the right. Go get coffee.
>
>Nice job, Berlin.
>
Know what? I don't think there was a good balance anywhere in the
close miked file, but three feet away it was really good lined up with
the sound hole.
On the close miked file did you use any low end roll-off? It was
really boomy an inch away, but not too bad at six inches.
d
On Nov 15, 10:02 am, s...@spam.com (Don Pearce) wrote:
> On Sun, 15 Nov 2009 10:44:37 -0500, Ty Ford <tyreef...@comcast.net>
> I'm wondering the same thing. The bigger file took about 40 seconds for
> me, at 700K per second.
So getting coffee is an appropriate task to fill the time :)
I did that just for you, Don. :)
No EQ.
Regards,
Ty
>On Sun, 15 Nov 2009 11:15:56 -0500, Don Pearce wrote
>(in article <4b0628bf....@news.eternal-september.org>):
>
>> On Sun, 15 Nov 2009 10:44:37 -0500, Ty Ford <tyre...@comcast.net>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> Hey,
>>>
>>> 16-bit mono wav files. Use the grey arrow on the right. Go get coffee.
>>>
>>> Nice cardioid condenser. Not at all peaked like the TLM 103. Smoother,
>>> thicker. Curiously capable even in front of the sound hole.
>>>
>>> http://idisk.mac.com/tyreeford-Public/Neumann%20TLM%20102?view=web
>>>
>>> 16-bit wav files. Use the grey arrow on the right. Go get coffee.
>>>
>>> Nice job, Berlin.
>>>
>>
>> Know what? I don't think there was a good balance anywhere in the
>> close miked file, but three feet away it was really good lined up with
>> the sound hole.
>>
>> On the close miked file did you use any low end roll-off? It was
>> really boomy an inch away, but not too bad at six inches.
>>
>> d
>
>I did that just for you, Don. :)
>
>No EQ.
>
Excellent. Three feet it is then. Great sound. Looking at the spec, I
see that it has a built in low end roll-off, which means that it is
intended to be used a little closer than the usual mic. In fact, going
through my cardioid calculations, three feet is probably just about
perfect for a flat overall response.
d
>>> http://idisk.mac.com/tyreeford-Public/Neumann%20TLM%20102?view=web
Thank you Ty, very interesting!
Kind regards
Peter Larsen
Yah,
BTW The strings on the Martin were not totally dead, but I have a gig this
weekend and changed them yesterday afternoon. Same guitar with a "newstrings"
file name has been added at the above link.
Regards,
Ty Ford
>On Tue, 17 Nov 2009 14:11:58 -0500, Peter Larsen wrote
>(in article <4b02f5a9$0$56793$edfa...@dtext02.news.tele.dk>):
>
>> Ty Ford wrote:
>>
>>>>> http://idisk.mac.com/tyreeford-Public/Neumann%20TLM%20102?view=web
>>
>> Thank you Ty, very interesting!
>>
>> Kind regards
>>
>> Peter Larsen
>
>Yah,
>
>BTW The strings on the Martin were not totally dead, but I have a gig this
>weekend and changed them yesterday afternoon. Same guitar with a "newstrings"
>file name has been added at the above link.
>
>Regards,
>
>Ty Ford
>
Never mind a coffee, I could go for a holiday this time. It is coming
through at 4kB/sec. I think there must be water in the wires
somewhere.
d
> Never mind a coffee, I could go for a holiday this time.
> It is coming through at 4kB/sec. I think there must be
> water in the wires somewhere.
It's not the fault of Ty's server, and of course you never said it was.
I just downloaded the 2 25 MB files concurrently with an average download
speed of a tiny bit under a megabyte per second.
> Never mind a coffee, I could go for a holiday this time. It is coming
> through at 4kB/sec. I think there must be water in the wires
> somewhere.
The internet routers have found a path via spacelab or mars explorer then.
But try a tracert, perhaps your isp has a router with a lot of latency, it
was as fast as should be with my connection here in Copenhagen.
> d
Kind regards
Peter Larsen
Thank you Peter and Arny,
Don just likes to try to bust my chops. :)
>On Tue, 17 Nov 2009 16:42:56 -0500, Peter Larsen wrote
>(in article <4b0318fb$0$56779$edfa...@dtext02.news.tele.dk>):
>
>> Don Pearce wrote:
>>
>>> Never mind a coffee, I could go for a holiday this time. It is coming
>>> through at 4kB/sec. I think there must be water in the wires
>>> somewhere.
>>
>> The internet routers have found a path via spacelab or mars explorer then.
>> But try a tracert, perhaps your isp has a router with a lot of latency, it
>> was as fast as should be with my connection here in Copenhagen.
>>
>>> d
>>
>> Kind regards
>>
>> Peter Larsen
>
>Thank you Peter and Arny,
>
>Don just likes to try to bust my chops. :)
>
Well, I went away (for my holiday) and when I came back the download
had actually quit with a timeout. Trying again.
d
Just did a tracert to see what was wrong. Is this a record?
C:\Documents and Settings\Compaq_Owner>tracert idisk.mac.com
Tracing route to idisk-gtm.mac.com.edgesuite.net [17.250.248.77]
over a maximum of 30 hops:
1 * * * Request timed out.
2 12 ms 16 ms 12 ms lo0-plusnet.pcl-ag02.plus.net
[195.166.128.39]
3 11 ms 12 ms 11 ms gi1-2-904.pcl-gw02.plus.net
[84.92.0.141]
4 12 ms 11 ms 12 ms te2-2.thn-gw2.plus.net [212.159.0.190]
5 12 ms 12 ms 11 ms vl23.pte-gw2.plus.net [212.159.4.28]
6 24 ms 22 ms 21 ms cr1-linx-peer.lon005.internap.net
[195.66.224.44
]
7 22 ms 21 ms 21 ms cr2-cr1.lon005.internap.net
[77.242.206.130]
8 96 ms 95 ms 96 ms
cr2.bsn006.inappnet.cr2.lon005.internap.net [66.79.158.5]
9 99 ms 98 ms 99 ms cr1-cr2.bsn006.internap.net
[66.79.147.13]
10 103 ms * 105 ms
cr2.nym009.inappnet.cr1.bsn006.internap.net [66.79.158.10]
11 * * * Request timed out.
12 * * * Request timed out.
13 * 274 ms *
cr1.wdc005.inappnet.cr1.phi004.internap.net [66.79.147.18]
14 * 253 ms 252 ms cr2-cr1.wdc005.internap.net
[66.79.146.202]
15 * * * Request timed out.
16 * * * Request timed out.
17 * * * Request timed out.
18 * * * Request timed out.
19 * * * Request timed out.
20 * * * Request timed out.
21 252 ms 251 ms *
cr2.lax009.inappnet.cr1.phx007.internap.net [66.
79.147.181]
22 * 252 ms 251 ms
cr2.sje007.inappnet.cr2.lax009.internap.net [66.
79.147.5]
23 252 ms * 251 ms
cr1-cr2.sje007.internap.net[66.79.146.189]
24 250 ms 252 ms 250 ms
core3.sje.inappnet-28.cr1.sje007.internap.net [66.79.148.130]
25 * 251 ms 251 ms border3.pc1-bbnet1.sje.pnap.net
[66.151.144.9]
26 * 256 ms * apple-17.sje.pnap.net [66.151.128.62]
27 * * * Request timed out.
28 * * * Request timed out.
29 * * 252 ms idisk.mac.com [17.250.248.77]
Never saw anything like it.
d
>On Tue, 17 Nov 2009 16:42:56 -0500, Peter Larsen wrote
>(in article <4b0318fb$0$56779$edfa...@dtext02.news.tele.dk>):
>
>> Don Pearce wrote:
>>
>>> Never mind a coffee, I could go for a holiday this time. It is coming
>>> through at 4kB/sec. I think there must be water in the wires
>>> somewhere.
>>
>> The internet routers have found a path via spacelab or mars explorer then.
>> But try a tracert, perhaps your isp has a router with a lot of latency, it
>> was as fast as should be with my connection here in Copenhagen.
>>
>>> d
>>
>> Kind regards
>>
>> Peter Larsen
>
>Thank you Peter and Arny,
>
>Don just likes to try to bust my chops. :)
>
>Ty Ford
>
That was unworthy! ;-)
Ok, it's downloaded now. Verdict - the new strings sound good - what
tuning are you using there? Sounded like some kind of open E.
8 inches was far too close, as was 14, but less so. Much better near
the bridge, but a bit nasal.
3 foot out was again the one I go for. Very good balance and the whole
thing just sounded right.Straight on was better than on the neck,
which was all string and no body.
Voice sounded very natural throughout.
d
> Just did a tracert to see what was wrong. Is this a record?
Triple digit millisconds is bad, fits a busy caching proxy better than a
plain router.
> C:\Documents and Settings\Compaq_Owner>tracert idisk.mac.com
> Tracing route to idisk-gtm.mac.com.edgesuite.net [17.250.248.77]
> over a maximum of 30 hops:
> 1 * * * Request timed out.
What's wrong on your own network?
> Never saw anything like it.
Oh, I did a couple of times when a local isp had a broken router somewhere.
Usually requires insisting on seocnd level support just to be able to talk
to someone who knows what a router is.
>> 1 * * * Request timed out.
>
>What's wrong on your own network?
That's just my DSL router. It isn't pingable. I don't object to that.
d
Methinks you doth protest too much.
VO and e. guitar tracks for everyone but Don. Not tracks for you! Come back
ONE YEAR.
> On Tue, 17 Nov 2009 17:19:17 -0500, Ty Ford <tyre...@comcast.net>
> wrote:
>
>> On Tue, 17 Nov 2009 16:42:56 -0500, Peter Larsen wrote
>> (in article <4b0318fb$0$56779$edfa...@dtext02.news.tele.dk>):
>>
>>> Don Pearce wrote:
>>>
>>>> Never mind a coffee, I could go for a holiday this time. It is coming
>>>> through at 4kB/sec. I think there must be water in the wires
>>>> somewhere.
>>>
>>> The internet routers have found a path via spacelab or mars explorer then.
>>> But try a tracert, perhaps your isp has a router with a lot of latency, it
>>> was as fast as should be with my connection here in Copenhagen.
>>>
>>>> d
>>>
>>> Kind regards
>>>
>>> Peter Larsen
>>
>> Thank you Peter and Arny,
>>
>> Don just likes to try to bust my chops. :)
>>
>> Ty Ford
>>
> That was unworthy! ;-)
>
> Ok, it's downloaded now. Verdict - the new strings sound good - what
> tuning are you using there? Sounded like some kind of open E.
shortcut capo, 2nd fret
> 8 inches was far too close, as was 14, but less so. Much better near
> the bridge, but a bit nasal.
>
> 3 foot out was again the one I go for. Very good balance and the whole
> thing just sounded right.Straight on was better than on the neck,
> which was all string and no body.
>
> Voice sounded very natural throughout.
>
> d
Remembering that this is with no EQ. What you like depends a lot on the
arrangement. If it's a busy arrangement, yes, there's too much guitar in
there, but I do like the top end a lot. It sounds pretty much the way the
guitar sounds. Slightly thick, but I'd rather be slightly thick and have room
to pull. If it's a sparse arrangement then we're talking butter here.
Did I mention E.guitar and VO clips are up now?
Regards,
Ty
> Did I mention E.guitar and VO clips are up now?
And the topless centerfold. Nice, but I don't get it, I just don't, why no
felt on top of the lower body to prevent reflections? - could that be an
obvious mod for it?
> Ty
Kind regards
Peter Larsen
> VO and e. guitar tracks for everyone but Don. Not tracks for you! Come back
> ONE YEAR.
>
> Ty Ford
>
Nice .wav Nazi reference.
+1
---Jeff
Thanks for the upload. I have a 103 and it doesn't really find its
way into a lot of recordings, just not in my favor. But this is an
interesting comparison. If it holds up to the eq one desires it could
be very useful.
v
So Ty, in your opinion, is this a better sounding mic than the TLM
103, the TLM 49 and the TLM 67?
I haven't liked any of those three mics when compared to the original
Neumanns which I own, including an original U87.
Do you find the TLM 102 good value for the money and useful as a voice
over microphone?
There are none in the stores here in Canada yet so I haven't had the
opportunity to bring one home and try it.
Hopefully, some will appear here soon.
Better? What's "better" for what application? It doesn't sound like a TLM
103. It's smooth, SOMEWHAT like a TLM 67, which I also like a lot.
Can't remember what I thought of the TLM 49 at the moment.
I think it does a very good job, but you absolutely need to hear it through
several preamps for yourself.
Regards,
Ty Ford