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Did the subject line make you nervous about what you might see? HA!

I liberated these guys (vintage Shure 55s) and one Amphenol to XLR cable from a closet in a church basement. They haven't seen the light of day in years, and were probably headed to the landfill. I was glad to find them and they were glad to give them away to a good home. They're a little crusty, a little musty, but I think they'll clean up nice.

They're both a little 'dark' sounding, I'm not sure if it's true to mics of the era or if they've just aged that way. The impedance switches on both work perfectly. Even if I never use these guys, they'll look cool sitting on my shelf - or I could always drop a modern capsule in one.

The one on the left with the blue grill worked right off the bat. The other one with the black grill just had a bad ON/OFF switch, and one deteriorated rubber shock mount - both minor problems easily repaired. The new switch is on its way and the rubber has already been replaced with some material I had here.

Whoever tried to 'fix' the switch last apparently didn't want to buy a switch and didn't study the wiring. They tried to bypass the switch by soldering the two wires together. If they would have studied the switch and connector for a few seconds they would have seen it's not an ON switch - it's an OFF switch. Closing the contacts doesn't pass the signal through, it shorts the output.

All together now. curl your lip . . 'thank you, thank you very much'

Elvis has left the building

Comments

natural Mon, 06/28/2010 - 07:49

They're really good for making mashed potatoes too.
congrats on your treasure hunt.
I used to have one like the one on the right.
I always thought they sounded somewhat similar to the 57 in a general way.
Try putting THAT on a snare.

I think you'll see one on Johnny Carson's desk if you catch any of the older clips.

RemyRAD Mon, 06/28/2010 - 12:26

They may sound dark as my much older 55 from the 1940s, it utilized a aluminum diaphragm. The newer units utilized a mylar diaphragm. And the current units utilize a SM57/58 diaphragm capsule. I have often thought about putting a new capsule into my microphone? I'm sure there wouldn't be too many problems mounting a 57 capsule into the cavernous enclosure. My current 55 actually is spring shock mounted from the factory along with some now rotted foam rubber. I wouldn't mind getting a couple more of those. If only to put some newer capsules inside.

My 55 looks like the front end of a 55 Buick
Mx. Remy Ann David