Consoles 987
used to instruct the microphone’s processing. The
microphone’s sample rate may either free run, in which
case it is a master (but will probably need SRCing to
work in a system of any complexity), or it can be slaved
to the synchronizing word clock. The latter is favored, if
available.
Present digital microphones using AES-42 have a
choice of termination, depending on whether the system
into which it is plugged already speaks AES-42 in that
particular microphone’s dialect (and so control from
that system is implicit), or via an external interface box
which permits a computer running the appropriate and
proprietary control software to talk to the microphone
and audio data recognizable as AES-3 or S/Pdif stripped
off for use.
An interesting side note is that Neumann, a major
influence over the scheme and early adopter, make
claims that such an arrangement results in better overall
dynamic range than traditional microphone connections.
The premise is that conversion of the capsule audio
down to the common low-level microphone intercon-
nection standard of 150:/sent through a wire/low-
noise amplification/then conversion of that signal to an
A/D convertor within the console, is intrinsically noisier
than the more direct connection of the capsule with
optimum impedance transfer to the convertor within the
microphone itself, without intervening transformations
and stages. Their claims of convertor performance so
used are impressive.
25.25.2 Moving Audio—Multiple Paths
More than a stereo pair calls for more radical answers,
and as is typical with fast-moving development tended
to outstrip standards-making—never mind the commer-
cial impetus to try to capture users within a proprietary
format. Two formats, one from pro audio, the other
from semi pro, stand out from the earlier days of multi-
track recorder/console interconnection:
25.25.2.1 AES-10—MADI
This format is very common for the interconnection of
digital reel-to-reel recorders (whoever thought we’d be
weeping nostalgic for those?) and older large-format
Figure 25-153. AES-42.
Computer
Capsule bias
inverter
dc power
Sync
Data
DSP
HPF
Phase
Compressor
De-esser
Limiter
AES
O/P
Framing
A/D
Control
Gain
Power/controlrecovery
XLR
(M)
Attenuator
A. An example AES-42 digital microphone.
Power/
clocks
TCP/IP
or
USB
or
MIDI
AES
S/PdiF
Tx
B. Basic AES-42 host interface C. Option example.
XLR (F)
AES
Rx
+10 V
Sync clock
Control data
Status data
Audio data Console