Skip to content
Free UK Mainland Delivery for Orders Over £99 - Need some advice? Talk to the team on 0151-236-7800
Free UK Mainland Delivery for Orders Over £99

Schoeps MK41g Supercardiod Capsule for Collette Series Preamplifiers

by Schoeps
£741.60 inc. vat
£618.00 ex. vat
SKU SSCHMK41G
In Stock - Available for Immediate Dispatch

Schoeps MK41g Supercardiod Capsule for Collette Series Preamplifiers

The MK 41 and the CCM 41 are strongly directional. Sound arriving from off axis is attenuated even more than with a cardioid. The pickup is drier and less susceptible to acoustic feedback than any other SCHOEPS microphone type, provided that a loudspeaker is not located directly on the rear axis of the microphone.

Its directivity is highly independent of frequency, so that even sounds arriving off axis and reverberant sound are registered without coloration. Consequently, even distant placement of the microphone produces a very natural sound pickup.This is a real advantage over interference-tube 'shotgun' microphones, whose directivity is very frequency-dependent - exceeding that of a supercardioid only at higher frequencies. Interference-tube microphones are notoriously sensitive to their position in a room, where the shifting patterns of reflections cause corresponding shifts in sound color. Thus the MK 41 and CCM 41 are surprisingly effective and space-saving alternatives to shotgun microphones and being small, they can often be placed closer to the sound source. (shotgun microphones)

An M/S microphone arrangement can be set up at quite some distance from the sound source if an MK 41 or CCM 41 is used for the 'M' channel.

Compared to the cardioid MK 4/ CCM 4, the supercardioid has slightly more rolloff at the low end due to the gradient effect. Its high-frequency linearity both on- and off-axis also gives it a less brilliant sound than the MK 4/ CCM 4.

MK41 Features

  • supercardioid pattern very well maintained throughout the frequency range
  • for music and speech
  • high directivity, comparable to that of a short 'shotgun' microphone up through midrange frequencies