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Author Topic: Ortf or DinA (which has a Wider field)  (Read 6608 times)

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Offline braweave

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Ortf or DinA (which has a Wider field)
« on: May 28, 2010, 10:11:35 AM »
So, i have always thought that ORTF has a "wider field" than Din/DinA meaning that each mic is open 55 degrees from A-B positioning. Or said differently you point each mic cap 55 degrees away from center)

However, I have came across the attached document which (if I am reading correctly) is stating that ORTF is actually 35 degrees from a-b position. (for further example look at the olson (135) compared to the Din.)

The reason I use the din/dina as a comparison is because it is an easy starting point (45 degrees no matter which way you look at it)

So..... Which is it?
A. Did i have it right the first time (I.e. is Ortf wider than Din/Dina)
 or
B. IS this document correct (meaning i had it wrong the first time) and ortf is narrower than Din / Dina??

Thanks!
« Last Edit: May 28, 2010, 10:13:08 AM by braweave »
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Offline mattmiller

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Re: Ortf or DinA (which has a Wider field)
« Reply #1 on: May 28, 2010, 10:35:35 AM »
I don't see where you're getting 35 degrees from.  It looks to clearly state that DIN/DINa are both at 90 degrees (from each other; 45 degrees from the imagined centerline), while ORTF is 110 degrees (55 degrees off center).
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Offline braweave

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Re: Ortf or DinA (which has a Wider field)
« Reply #2 on: May 28, 2010, 10:49:06 AM »
I don't see where you're getting 35 degrees from.  It looks to clearly state that DIN/DINa are both at 90 degrees (from each other; 45 degrees from the imagined centerline), while ORTF is 110 degrees (55 degrees off center).
if you look at the drawings. You know that the Din/Dina are 45 degrees, it shows ortf as being narrower (thus it has to be 35 degrees).  I am getting 35 degrees as that is the incident of the triangle. (90 + 55 + 35).
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Re: Ortf or DinA (which has a Wider field)
« Reply #3 on: May 28, 2010, 10:56:02 AM »
Are you looking at the rectangles as if they were the capsules or the bodies of the mics?  They are supposed to be the caps.  Not sure why you think ORTF is narrower than DIN from those drawings.
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Offline datbrad

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Re: Ortf or DinA (which has a Wider field)
« Reply #4 on: May 28, 2010, 11:01:52 AM »
I don't see where you're getting 35 degrees from.  It looks to clearly state that DIN/DINa are both at 90 degrees (from each other; 45 degrees from the imagined centerline), while ORTF is 110 degrees (55 degrees off center).
if you look at the drawings. You know that the Din/Dina are 45 degrees, it shows ortf as being narrower (thus it has to be 35 degrees).  I am getting 35 degrees as that is the incident of the triangle. (90 + 55 + 35).

I think what's throwing you off is the template is designed to be used while facing the mics looking down from above with the caps pointing towards you, with the source at your back, not standing over the mics with the cable ends facing you, while looking down with the source out in front of you. That is why you seem mixed up on the angles. Make sense?

Edit to add: To answer your original question, ORTF is wider regarding intensity stereo effect using the polar patterns for directional cues, while DIN has a wider spacing with regard to difference in time stereo effect. DINa is going to be tighter regarding imaging than ORTF, with the smaller angle and the same 17cm spacing.
« Last Edit: May 28, 2010, 11:05:32 AM by DATBRAD »
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Offline Brian Skalinder

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Re: Ortf or DinA (which has a Wider field)
« Reply #5 on: May 28, 2010, 11:54:18 AM »
You may find the stickied thread at the top of the forum and the Stereophonic Zoom paper and discussions linked therein an interesting and/or helpful read.
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Offline Roger Gustavsson

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Re: Ortf or DinA (which has a Wider field)
« Reply #6 on: May 28, 2010, 11:56:59 AM »
These documents below show what kind of presentation various setups gives. The recording angle and the angle between the microphones are two different things. Each document have the recording angle on top, "60/90/120° Klangkörper". That is the width of the orchestra/stage/area of the musicians etc. The diagram below shows the presentation of the recorded sound between the speakers set at +-30° (44-46° is better in most cases).

http://www.sengpielaudio.com/Stereo-LautlokEines60.pdf
http://www.sengpielaudio.com/Stereo-LautlokEines90.pdf
http://www.sengpielaudio.com/Stereo-LautlokEines120.pdf

In the diagrams you can compare a pair of cardioids (Niere/Niere) with different angles and spacings and the ORTF (halvway down the pages). You can see that the some setups results in "a hole in the middle". Others gives a very narrow presentation.

ORTF is suited to a maximum recording angle of 90°. A pair of cardioid 20-25 cm apart and with 90° between them or a pair of figure-of-eight with 80°, gives a similar presentation.

If very close to the stage/musicians, look at the recording angle of 120°. It seems that XY at 90-135° or AB about 20-30cm apart would be the better choice. Avoid figure-of-eight, DIN, NOS, ORTF or widely spaced AB (mostly omnis).

Far from the stage/musicians, look at the 60° diagram. Figure-of-eight, DIN, NOS or ORTF seems to give similar results. AB spaced 40-50cm can also be used. XY or widely spaced AB (mostly omnis) should be avoided.



Roger

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Re: Ortf or DinA (which has a Wider field)
« Reply #7 on: May 28, 2010, 08:19:24 PM »
These documents below show what kind of presentation various setups gives. The recording angle and the angle between the microphones are two different things. Each document have the recording angle on top, "60/90/120° Klangkörper". That is the width of the orchestra/stage/area of the musicians etc. The diagram below shows the presentation of the recorded sound between the speakers set at +-30° (44-46° is better in most cases).

http://www.sengpielaudio.com/Stereo-LautlokEines60.pdf
http://www.sengpielaudio.com/Stereo-LautlokEines90.pdf
http://www.sengpielaudio.com/Stereo-LautlokEines120.pdf

In the diagrams you can compare a pair of cardioids (Niere/Niere) with different angles and spacings and the ORTF (halvway down the pages). You can see that the some setups results in "a hole in the middle". Others gives a very narrow presentation.

ORTF is suited to a maximum recording angle of 90°. A pair of cardioid 20-25 cm apart and with 90° between them or a pair of figure-of-eight with 80°, gives a similar presentation.

I had downloaded these years ago but had forgotten about these useful diagrams.  Keep in mind that they say nothing about other important aspects of sound capture such as the nature of the reverberant pickup of the room outside the 'Klangkörper' angle (or in Stereo Zoom terms,  the Stereo Recording Angle or SRA).

Quote
If very close to the stage/musicians, look at the recording angle of 120°. It seems that XY at 90-135° or AB about 20-30cm apart would be the better choice. Avoid figure-of-eight, DIN, NOS, ORTF or widely spaced AB (mostly omnis).

Far from the stage/musicians, look at the 60° diagram. Figure-of-eight, DIN, NOS or ORTF seems to give similar results. AB spaced 40-50cm can also be used. XY or widely spaced AB (mostly omnis) should be avoided.

Very close and very far is where the applicability of this data to spaced omnis falls apart in my experience.  I've found that spaced omnis on stage can work very well with significant distances between mics of around 4' or ~1.2m, probably because there are intensity differences introduced due to the close proximity to the sound sources.  I've run wider spacing on stage with additional mics to fill the center, but 3'-4' seems pretty safe with no hole.  Spaced omnis on stage or stagelip can also work well to balance the aparent closeness and timbre of each source, since each of the players are more likely to be a similar distance from the mics (another aspect not covered in the PDFs)

Likewise for distant mic'ing, I commonly use a 3' (1m) A-B spacing at outdoor amphitheater type concerts from typical taper's section FOB distances.  By my calculations that spacing gives an acurate SRA of around 45 degrees, which is often close to the angle between stacks at that distance.  Additionaly I suspect that the strange situation of recording two widely spaced speaker sources that are reproducing primarily mono information (the typical concert situation) is somewhat of a special case, different from individual sources spread across a stage and so less suseptible to wide A-B spacing problems.

In my opinion, these diagrams are best applied to cardioid-type pattern configurations.  Thanks for posting the links, Roger.
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Offline DigiGal

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Re: Ortf or DinA (which has a Wider field)
« Reply #8 on: August 20, 2011, 01:20:00 PM »
Here is a fun link demonstrating the various stereo mic configurations.  You can vary the mic patterns and angles in real time within any of the listed configurations and see how your coverage is affected. 

DINa is not included seems DINa is never mentioned.  You can visualize it, however, by selecting the DIN configuration and changing the microphone distance from 0.20 to 0.17 meters.



http://www.sengpielaudio.com/Visualization-ORTF-E.htm
« Last Edit: August 20, 2011, 01:38:27 PM by DigiGal »
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