Is Your Mic-Pre Clean Past 30 kHz?
Who Should Care?
By Allen Burdick
President, Benchmark Media Systems, Inc.
You Should Care!
High Frequency Intermodulation Distortion is a Critical Mic-Pre
Parameter.
The mic-pre function is one of the most difficult challenges facing
the audio engineer. A mic-pre is often the limiting factor in the audio
chain. When selecting a mic-pre, everyone looks for great
specifications, along with some magic, that will set their recordings
apart from the crowd. Overall, the technology of low noise amplifiers
has progressed superbly during the past 30 years from warm, but noisy,
tube amplifiers, through the harsh sound of the early discrete
transistor amplifiers, to the relatively clean op-amp designs of today.
One electronic element that has historically been a part of almost
every mic-pre design is the input transformer. We have listened to
preamplifiers with transformers so long and so often that we've been
educated to expect the sound of iron without even realizing it! When we
listen to a truly clean transformerless mic-preamp we often say that
something is missing in the low end. And, of course, we're right! What's
missing is the distortion generated by the non-linear core of the
transformer. The engineers at WGBH-FM in Boston are among those with
time to do extensive listening, and who possess the best in both types
of mic-preamp systems. They have been able to make the long term
comparisons everyone wishes they could. Now that their ears are
re-educated, they consistently pick the clean amplifiers for their
recordings.
But "clean" does not only come from the absence of iron
and nickel. High frequency intermodulation (IM) distortion can also ruin
otherwise good performance in a mic-pre. Essentially, all distortion is
caused when signals are passed through a non-linear element. Harmonic
distortion and intermodulation distortion are both created by the same
mechanism. This may be a narrowband amplifier, an amplifier that is slew
rate limited, or an intrinsically flawed design element in the
amplifier, such as the output stage. At low frequencies, the large
amount of feedback in today's audio amplifier elements all but
eliminates distortion products. However, at high frequencies the
intrinsic gain of an amplifier element is significantly reduced and
therefore the percentage of gain available for use in feedback becomes
severely limited. Excellent high frequency performance requires a
careful use of wide bandwidth, intrinsically clean circuit elements, and
the proper amount of feedback.
High frequency IM distortion can result from two significant sources
in a mic-pre. The first is intermodulation between genuine high
frequency audio signals that are present from the source, such as the
sounds from a triangle, rich in harmonics. The late Deane Jensen
measured significant energy from cymbals out past 30 kHz. If your
mic-pre can't properly amplify those signals, the intermodulation
products that reflect back into the normal audio band will be most
unpleasant.
The second source, and perhaps the most pernicious, is that of RF
induced IM distortion. This is a result of 1) amplifier stages that have
not been protected from strong external RF signals, and 2) from a lack
of proper feedback compensation which allows the amplifier to intersect
its open loop gain curve. When this occurs in the presence of RF, the
amplifier becomes non-linear and intermittent IM distortion is the
result. And intermittent it often is. A product may measure well on the
bench, but when placed into a system or when taken into the field, users
may find that its performance is far less than stellar. Here at
Benchmark, we are convinced that most of the "bite",
"edge", and otherwise undesirable characteristics of many
amplifier designs are a result of poor RF immunity. RF causes
non-linearity to create new, unexpected, and unwanted audio signals from
the incoming audio. And whether you want it or not, this new extra audio
comes free with most mic-preamps! To achieve truly clean audio at 30
kHz, the 3 dB bandwidth should extend past at least 200 kHz and still be
RF stable. This is no trivial task!
Who should care? At Benchmark, we care! We have created
"clean" with a very careful transformerless design. The
Benchmark
MPS-420 has
wideband - 500 kHz for outstanding performance at 30+ kHz; flawless
square wave response - a powerful measure of RF stability; and
a common mode filter that removes RF from the microphone input line.
RF protection
has been accomplished without limiting the bandwidth, without
degrading the 1 dB noise figure, (see the "Noise Primer"
in "A Clean Audio Installation Guide™")
and, most notably, without compromising the distortion performance. See the
100 kHz DIM, and the
CCIF twin tone IM sweeps.
Still want "warm" (2nd harmonic distortion)? Fine. Keep a
good tube mike, an Aphex® Aural Processor, or a tube compressor
in your bag of tricks. That way, YOU are in control. But don't settle
for high frequency IMD that comes free. The cost is too high: it
eliminates the magic!
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