In practice, people often call a microphone with a diaphragm greater than or equal to 3/4 inch as a large diaphragm microphone. Generally speaking, a microphone with a larger diaphragm produces a larger sound, which caters to the needs of engineers who like to record more distinctive sounds (such as human voices).
In addition, large-diaphragm microphones are more sensitive to audio signals than small-diaphragm and medium-diaphragm microphones because of their relatively large contact area with audio signals. People generally think that large-diaphragm microphones can capture more low-frequency signals than small-diaphragm microphones. This argument is reasonable, Because compared with some small-diaphragm microphones that are reasonably designed and can provide high-definition sound effects over a wide frequency range, large-diaphragm microphones tend to enhance certain characteristics in the audio signal to make it sound The effect has obvious bass characteristics.
In the current market, there are many very high-quality large-diaphragm microphones, such as U87 Ai, MK4 and so on. The large-diaphragm microphone has a clear and thick sound, high sensitivity, and good sound quality. It can cope with most sound sources, but it has strict requirements on the recording environment: Don't fall, don't moisten, don't blow