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IRPA MKE-7 (1989) - #119
IRPA MKE-7 (1989) - #119
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Manufacturer: IRPA
Model: MKE-7
Country of Origin: USSR
Year of Manufacture: 1989
Serial: 119
Type: FET
Capsule: Electret SDC
Polar Pattern: Cardioid
PSU: Modded 48V
Rarity Scale: 8.5/10
All of our equipment is carefully cleaned, serviced, and tested before being listed, and again before being shipped out.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (click to expand)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (click to expand)
The MKE-7, a beautifully designed Soviet condenser microphone, was developed and manufactured in the 1980’s by IRPA (Popov Institute) in Leningrad. These are rare mics, each hand made at the Popov Institute.
This is a 100% complete like-new set with the original desk stand, the exceptionally rare stand-mount connector, and its original wooden box. The red pouch is not original but looks pretty damn fine, and holds the stand and cable perfectly. The microphone has been modified to accept 48V phantom power.
The MKE-7 is a transformer balanced electret condenser mic, and just like any vintage IRPA/Oktava mic with an MK## is a tube condenser and every MK##m mic is a solid-state condenser, every MKE-## is an electret condenser. Electret capsules differ from “traditional" externally polarized condensers in that their backplate is pre-charged and doesn’t require an external polarization voltage like other condensers, but they still require external power for their amplifiers. Many early electret microphone capsules have lost their charge over time, causing low output, poor noise-floor, and skewed frequency response, but every IRPA MKE-7 I’ve ever heard is operating as it should. Almost 95% of modern condenser microphones now use electret capsules due to their excellent price to performance ratio. The MKE-7’s elecret capsule screws onto the microphone below the grill, and very closely resembles the KK84-capsule that is used in the tube MK15 and MK12 mics.
As you can see from the photos, the MKE-7 is a very well made microphone with excellent attention to detail. The beautiful grill pattern is almost identical to that of a LOMO 19a18. The sturdy and handsome connector and stand mount are very well made, and the mic neatly screws onto its own proprietary desk stand. Every one had its date and serial number painted onto its body by hand, presumably by the same person because the handwriting is identical on every mic we’ve seen. The ergonimics of this microphone strongly indicate that it was designed to be a conference or speech microphone to be placed on a desk to capture a speaker's voice. This would imply that it does a good job picking up mid-range frequencies, which it most certainly does with grace, making it a great colorful microphone on acoustic guitars, snare drums, and guitar amps. It has a gentle low frequency roll off, a present but smooth midrange, and a soft top end that suits musical instruments quite well.If you would like to hear the MKE-7 used to record an entire song, please listen below.
HEAR THE IRPA MKE-7 (1989) - #119 (click for info)
HEAR THE IRPA MKE-7 (1989) - #119 (click for info)
You can hear a pair of MKE-7’s in action by listening to our first "proprietary microphone jingle” on the player below.
The song was recorded using the MKE-7 for every instrument in cardioid. Everything was recorded at modest levels through our Sphere Eclipse console preamps into a Burl A/D without any processing whatsoever.










