User:Jiawei Yan/sandbox
A pop filter, pop shield or pop screen is a noise protection filter for microphones, typically used in a recording studio. It serves to reduce or eliminate popping sounds caused by the mechanical impact of fast-moving air on the microphone from plosives during recorded speech and singing. Pop filters can also keep saliva off the microphone during recording.
Contents
Background[edit]
Popping sounds occur particularly in the pronunciation of
Construction[edit]
A typical pop filter is composed of one or more layers of acoustically semi-transparent material such as woven
Metal pop filters are durable and designed with wider holes having less effect on high frequencies.
An improvised pop shield, functionally identical to the professional units, can be made with material from
Function[edit]
Pop filters are designed to attenuate the energy of the plosive, which otherwise might exceed the design input capacity of the microphone, leading to clipping. In effect, the plosive's discrete envelope of sound energy is intercepted and broken up by the strands of the filter material before it can impinge on, and momentarily distort, the sensitive diaphragm of the microphone. Pop filters do not appreciably affect hissing sounds or sibilance, for which de-essing is used.
Additionally, a pop filter can protect against the accumulation of saliva on the microphone element. Salts in human saliva are corrosive, so the use of a pop filter may improve the lifespan of the microphone.
A pop filter differs from a microphone windscreen. Pop filters are generally used in a studio environment to help improve the sound quality of the recorded voice, while windscreens are typically used outdoors and get rid of any low distortion. Windscreens are also used by vocalists on stage to reduce plosives and saliva, though they may not be as acoustically transparent as a studio pop filter.
See also[edit]
A microphone windscreen
Set up
The position of the pop filter depends on the amount of power the artist is going to communicate while recording. The position of the pop filter is different while different recording situations. The further position from the microphone will cause fewer pop sounds. More distance means increasing the microphone gain and gaining more room noise. Normally, to get good quality, place the pop filter about 2-6 inches away from the microphone.
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