Audio School for Home Sound Engineering and Music Production
Home Online Courses Conversation AC Radio AC Blog About Forum
 

sound school

SENNHEISERS POPULAR MKH 8000 SERIES GOES DIGITAL


This content is brought to you by Audiocourses dot com

OLD LYME, CONNECTICUT - JUNE 2009: Sennheiser is introducing the MZD 8000 digital module for the popular MKH 8000 Series at InfoComm 2009. Now, the MKH 8000 series can be digitalized directly at the microphone head, ensuring a natural sound without any loss of quality.

"A warm, natural, yet fantastically clear and powerful, sound is what makes the MKH 8000 series really stand out," explains Dawn Birr, Sennheiser's product manager for professional products. "The new digital module ensures that this sound is maintained in full quality along the entire signal chain, in contrast to conventional digitalization, which uses a separate analogue/digital converter at some stage along the chain. The MZD 8000 digital module eliminates cable losses and, most importantly, features a converter and surrounding circuitry that have been optimally matched to the microphone."

DIGITAL MICROPHONES IN AN INSTANT
The compact MZD module is simply screwed onto the microphone head in place of the XLR module. Like all signal-carrying components in the 8000 series, the module is designed with two channels and converts the microphone signal according to the AES 42 standard, turning the audio signal of the MKH 8020 (omni-directional), MKH 8040 (cardioid) and MKH 8050 (super-cardioid) into a digital one. "Signal disruptions caused by interference or cable capacitance are a thing of the past, as digitalization takes place directly behind the microphone head," Birr adds.

REMOTE CONTROL MADE EASY
In addition to the A/D converter (24-bit, sampling rate up to 192 kHz), the digital module contains a DSP unit that, with the aid of dedicated PC control software and an AES 42 interface, allows microphone settings such as the low-cut filter, attenuation and limiter to be remote-controlled. The interface, e.g. Neumann's DMI, also provides the phantom power and word clock for synchronizing the microphones. Alternatively, the microphones can be synchronized using an external word clock. "Their modular design makes these microphones absolutely future-proof," concludes Birr.




Get Pro Audio News Daily
Enter your email address:
Privacy assured

Subscribe in iTunes for the audio version of this news!

Send to a Friend  Send to a Friend

Printer Friendly Page, Click Here  Printer Friendly Page, Click Here

.


Audio School


Online Audio Courses

Subscriptions

AC Radio

Enrol in School

GeoTag

Terms Of Service

Audio Marketing

School Members

SAE

Contact Audio Courses

Privacy Policy

Topics

Recording Search

AES


Sound Engineering and Online Audio Distance Learning © 2001 - 2010 Audio Courses - Online Audio Distance Learning School. Audio Distance Learning at its best!

SAE Educational Ltd