You can not directly power the 853 with phantom power you will blow up the mics. The ones with the XLR connector on one end have electronics inside them to reduce the phantom supply to 10 volts and also to act as an impedance converter. Its also not true that using phantom power increases the spl of the microphone. Actually the difference is because your using a preamp with more dynamic range, and this is not a product of bias voltage. The difference between 5 volts and 10 volts is a distortion percentage of only 1%. So if your running the mics from a 5 volt supply and then switch to a 10 volt supply you will not notice any increase in SPL handling of the mic it self.
What about this?
http://www.audio-technica.com/cms/wired_mics/a3e071b73f3be570/index.html
PHANTOM POWER REQUIREMENTS 9-52V DC, 2 mA typical
I'm just trying to understand, but those specs say it can handle up to 52V phantom, right? That page also states the SPL increases with phantom power.
Roel
Well we all know that AT also says the 853 mics can handle 135 db but we know that's not really the case in the real world when running these mics 2 wire..
Switching over to phantom power does not increase MAX SPL of the AT 853 microphone
what does increase max spl of a microphone is running the capsule 3 wire that is what happens when you use the phantom adaptor..
But I have found a way to mod a basic three wire to two wire and still get all the SPL handling that this mic would get running three wire and phantom... But with even less distortion and with less gear. Increasing the voltage to "most" electret capsules from 5 volts to 10 yields at most and this is again with the 853 and with my capsules a decrease in distortion by only .05% not enough to even worry about.. My mod reduces distortion by at least 10% to 15% Thd.
Chris