Hiya - i currently am using a pair of AT4050s set to omni for the chamber ensemble work i do. i was wondering if switching over to a pair of true pressure omnis might be an improvement due to better bass response. so, if any of you have experience with this, or even just a reasonable opinion about omnis, i would like to hear from you.
Do you specialise in any particular type of chamber music and/or work only/mostly in specific venues/types of acoustic? (E.g piano trios in recital rooms/brass dectets in churches/20 piece ensembles in cathedrals)? And more importantly, what kind of sound do/don't you like (close and intimate/sitting amongst the players/more distant 'audience perspective'/ultra detailed, tight, and clear/warmer, rounder, fuller/hyper realistic/more impressionistic/etc., etc.)?
The AT4050s are nice mics; are you looking for alternatives because there's something specific about them that you don't like/which they don't give you, or more out of curiosity as to what else is out there?
It isn't only the LF response that changes with a switch from a switchable, dual diaphragm LDC in omni to a SDC pressure transducer. Noise levels can change (which may or may not be relevant, according to what you record, in what circumstances, and just how noisy/not are the mics) but for me the biggest difference (normally) is in the way in which the polar pattern changes with frequency and it can make a quite a difference to how you use them and the results you get.
i cannot afford the schoeps cmc6/mk2 (free field) setup i might like, or km131s, or senn mkh20s, or DPA 4006s, so i would need recommendations on a mid priced omni setup - perhaps km183s (thought they have a significant high end rise which may not be good fo classical work), or DPA 4090s (too much self noise for classical?), charter oak m900 (never heard em), etc...
The HF rise on things like the 183/130/MK2S etc. can be useful in come circumstances, even on chamber music but if your main application is in clearer/drier acoustics, or you favour a more intimate sound, or simply don't like brighter sounding recordings, it can be a problem. Re-angling the mics always gives a useful degree of control but being forced into it as a starting point is far from ideal as extreme re-angling, such as pointing the mics 90 degrees off axis can bring other problems. It's more a 'get out of trouble' solution suggested, for example when you have to do a piano recording, want to try some digital mics but the only ones available are uncomfortably bright (eh, John

). If you're buying/hiring/whatever a pair of mics for a specific purpose, it seems to me an odd choice to me to get something that you know is wrong from the start, even if there is a work around; it's just piling a compromise on top of a compromise/fix for a problem you didn't have.
so - will true pressure omnis in that price range be any kind of improvement over my AT4050s?
They'll likely be 'different' but whether or not it's an 'improvement' is another matter. If it were a change with a no compromise/anything goes budget, then I'd say it'd be possible to find overall improvements amongst the possible differences; swapping to something on a much tighter budget, I think, is going to be more of a case of trading differences - hence asking what kind of sound you like/areas you work in, and whether you're trying to change/fix something specific or just looking for a bit of a change.