Omnis give a rich, lush sound and are generally preferable for classical concerts, except when remote from the sound source, like in an opera in a big house, where the orchestra pit separates you from the singers. The singers may not be heard clearly enough with omnis, even though the overall sound may be superb. I have been trying to find a way to combine the forward presence of the singers’ voices in cardioids with the rich sound the omnis give.
Today, after my daily workout of 80 laps, I stood in the shower in automatic pilot/ complete nirvana mode, when suddenly I heard the voice of a demon telling me “Dual Headphone Adapter”. I went to a Radio Shack, bought a dual headphone adapter with two 1/8” stereo female plugs and one 1/8” stereo male jack. I hooked up my omnis to one female plug, the cardioids to the other (they have almost similar sensitivity) – two pairs of mics in parallel – and connected the male jack to a battery box, to a HiMD. I checked to make sure I got signal from each pair separately as well as together and made some test recordings at home. All I can say is that the sound of the two together was different from each by itself, but I need to test them in a large auditorium, where the omnis will have more reflected sound to pick, in addition to the direct sound the cards will pick up. Any thoughts? Obviously that drains up the battery twice as fast, and I wonder if the double load may cause problems for the battery box over an extended performance. But it should perform with mics with half the resistance, which comes up to the same result. I don’t assume the recording device is having a double load due to the decreased resistance (I assume the battery box takes all the load) – but I’m not sure. Each mic pair is still getting 9v, of course. I placed the Lt. card next to the Lt. omni, and did the same with the right pair, so as to minimize any lag time (and there wasn’t any). It’s important not to mix the Lt. and Rt. Mics.
Noam