For those that don't know what a stereo mic is, it is basically using two microphones to record to both the left and right audio channels of a stereo music track to give that "3D" effect.
Remove these ads by
Signing UpStep 1Go get stuff
- A flexible lamp arm
- 24" x 6" sheet of 1/8" acrylic
- 12" x 12" sheet of 1/8" milky white acrylic
- A laser cutter (or handsaw)
- A heat gun
- An oven mitt
- Table clamps
- An IKEA clock frame
- Two metal washers
- Two 1" (or larger) rubber grommets
- Two dynamic microphones
- A dozen LEDs
- Two BC546 transistor
- Two 100uF capacitors
- Two 2.2K resistors
- Two 47K resistors
- A 220 ohm resistor
- A 5V power transformer (give or take 1 volt)
- Red and black solid wire
- A panel mount stereo jack
- An SPST pull cord switch
- A power drill (with assorted bits)
- Assorted hand tools
| « Previous Step | Download PDFView All Steps | Next Step » |



























































I am also trying to make a desktop microphone(with my destroyed earphone which contains a mic.) at home with very simple steps can you help me to make it in a easy way plz help me ,mail me on vermakushal.28@gmail.com
THANKS.....
According to this site http://emusician.com/daw/emusic_going_wild/ (about halfway down the page)
"The ORTF technique, which specifies two cardioid mics 110 degrees apart with 6.69 inches between the capsules, was designed to mimic human hearing."
I set mine up the way they state and it works great. I have a Tascam US-122 USB sound card that has Phantom power on it hooked to an old laptop (Compaq presario, AMD K6), I use it for outdoor field recording (crickets, traffic, creek sounds, etc)