Sound Advice : Miking
How do shotgun mics achieve such a tight polar pattern compared with other designs? And how come they seem to be getting shorter every year?
Gavin Burley, via email
SOS Technical Editor Hugh Robjohns replies: Shotgun or rifle mics are more properly called 'Interference Tube' microphones, and they are often assumed to have magically tight polar patterns that simply don't exist in reality. Shotgun mics do have their uses, of course, but have to be used intelligently to avoid the significant compromises associated with them.
All shotgun mics employ a standard directional capsule —
usually a supercardioid — but with a long, hollow, slotted
'interference tube' attached to its front surface. Although this
arrangement inherently moves the capsule further away from the sound
source — thus making the direct/reverberant ratio slightly worse — the
hope is that the tighter directionality (at high frequencies), which
reduces the ambient noise, outweighs this disadvantage.
The idea of the interference tube is that the wanted
on-axis sound passes straight down the length of the tube to the capsule
diaphragm unimpeded, but the unwanted off-axis sound has to reach the
diaphragm by entering the side slots. Since this unwanted sound will
enter multiple slots, and the distances from those slots to the
diaphragm vary, the off-axis sound will arrive at the diaphragm with
varying phase relationships and so partially cancel one another out —
this is why it is called an 'interference tube'! Consequently, off-axis
sounds are attenuated relative to the on-axis sounds, and hence the
polar pattern is narrower towards the front than would be possible with
a simple super-cardioid mic on its own.
However, this is actually a pretty crude solution
because the actual amount of cancellation depends on the wavelength of
the sound, its angle of incidence, the length of the tube, and the slot
spacing. Most standard-length shotgun tubes don't have much effect below
about 2kHz, and are no more directional than the basic supercardioid
capsule design they employ below that frequency. While very long rifle
mics do exist and are directional to lower frequencies, (for example,
the Sennheiser MKH816), they are unwieldy to use and the longer tube
necessarily moves the capsule even further away from the sound source,
negating to some extent the enhanced directional benefits.
Moreover, if you look at the real polar plot of an
interference tube mic at different frequencies — rather than the
idealised versions many manufacturers print — it looks like a squashed
spider, with multiple narrow nulls and peaks in sensitivity at different
angles for different frequencies. This is the direct consequence of the
interference tube principle, and the practical consequence is that
off-axis sound sources are inherently very coloured. Worse still, if an
off-axis sound moves (or the mic moves relative to a fixed off-axis
source), the colouration varies and becomes quite phasey-sounding.
So, shotgun mics work best when the unwanted off-axis
sounds are significantly different from the wanted on-axis sounds — and
nothing moves! Shotgun mics don't work well at all in small rooms or in
highly reverberant spaces, because the on- and off-axis sounds are
inherently very similar. Neither do they work well where there are
well-defined off-axis sounds moving relative to the mic, or where the
mic has to move, to track the wanted sound with static off-axis sources.
In these cases, the directionality may not be as narrow as one would
hope and off-axis attenuation will be significantly worse than expected,
and/or the off-axis sounds will become noticeably and distractingly
coloured.
The apparent shortening of shotgun mics is largely
about style over function, and marketing an apparently 'pro' approach
with consumer convenience. It's a con, because the length of the
interference tube is determined only by the physics of the wavelengths
of sound, and there's no getting around that. Short shotguns inherently
only work at higher frequencies and are pointless if the sound source
you plan to record comprises mid and low frequencies.
Having said that, the adoption of digital technology has allowed some improvements to be made in shotgun performance, and the Schoeps Super CMIT is a good example of what can be done. This mic uses a supercardioid capsule at the base of a standard interference tube, as normal, and a second cardioid capsule facing backwards just behind it. The two capsule outputs are combined using some clever DSP processing to increase the directivity significantly at lower frequencies — a process Schoeps call 'Beamforming' — which maintains a tighter polar pattern across a much wider bandwidth than is customary.
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