I'm confused about how mid-side works...
1I think I get it... I was thinking that by splitting the signal and reversing polarity on one of the signals, you were somehow creating an outlet for the back of the mic that could pick up a different sound than the front side... and so when you panned the mics out, you got different sounds on the left and right channel.As I understand it now, the effect is created by the fact that a ribbon mic creates a positive voltage from the front and a negative voltage on the back.... So, after you mult the signal, reverse the polarity, and pan hard left and right, you end up withLEFT CHANNEL Middle Channel RIGHT CHANNEL (+/-) (+) (+/-) but you invert polarity and get this: (+/-) (+) (-/+)***This diagram represents the front and back (respectively) of the ribbon mic: (+/-) So, sound on the left side of the microphones will show positive voltage from the ribbon, plus positive voltage from the directional. Positive plus positive = positive. The sound will appear on the left of the stereo field because you panned one of the + mics that way. And so, if I understand it correctly, there is nothing inherently different about the signal, except for the fact that you inverted the polarity of the signal??? And so, when a sound comes from the right side of the array, the ribbon mic initially gets a (-) signal. Negative plus a positive equals nothing, so it SHOULD be quieter on the right side, right? BUT you reversed the polarity of the signal so what you actually get is: Positive plus positive = Positive, and after you pan hard right, the sound appears on the right side of the stereo field.. Excuse me for wasting so much breath on this subject... It's something I've always wanted to understand more clearly. I'm reading about the MS pair as I type here, and please, if I am very far off from the truth, please stop me before I confuse myself even more.... thanks again, trent