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Review LCT 940

Paul Vnuk Jr vom Recording Magazine hat das LCT 940 getestet.

May 18, 2013 1 min read

LEWITT Content Team
Enthusiasts at work

This image shows a sound engineer in studio with his LCT 940 Tube/FET microphone

Paul Vnuk Jr vom Recording Magazine hat das LCT 940 getestet. 

Conclusion: "The 940 is battle-ready and solidly built, just as I have come to expect from LEWITT. Designed in Austria and built in a company-owned Chinese factory, the LCT 940 sports a very European styling and nothing on this mic looks or feels cheap. The external power supply is a similarly Euro-styled black box. Visually it reminds me of a high-end piece of home audio equipment.

[...] this is one of the quietest tube mics I have used... the LEWITT website has the full story, but I can note here that the LCT 940’s rated self-noise is 12 to 13 dBA in tube mode and only 8 to 9 dBA in solid-state.

[...] The tube side of the mic and the blending capabilities really surprised me. While it’s not as aggressive as the tube blending on UA’s 710 series preamps, it’s not a subtle effect either! Moving from solid state to tube offers a pronounced change that fills out the sound like pouring warm honey from a pitcher. It’s just a nice sheen of sweetness that envelops the sound and ultimately adds to this mic’s versatility and pads and filters, rather than a workhorse, I would instead label the LCT 940 as a highly artistic mic with a wide range of tonal variation that can be caressed and carved to fit a plethora of applications, all with a hint of beauty and sweetness.

At $1499 street price it’s not cheap, but it’s in line with many other tube mics; beauty this nice has a price. And no other tube mic at any price has this level of tonal variation."

 

 


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