Template:Sennheiser E Series Microphones: Difference between revisions

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[[Category:Sennheieser]]
[[Category:Sennheiser]]
[[Category:Microphone]]
[[Category:Microphone]]

Latest revision as of 07:08, 16 December 2025

Comparison of Sennheiser Evolution Series Microphones

Microphone Type Polar Pattern Frequency Response Distinguishing Features Official Product Page
e 835 Dynamic vocal Cardioid 40 – 16,000 Hz Entry-level vocal mic; balanced sound for speech and singing; rugged build Sennheiser e 835
e 845 Dynamic vocal Supercardioid 40 – 16,000 Hz Tighter pickup than e835; better feedback rejection; suited for loud stages Sennheiser e 845
e 865 Condenser vocal Supercardioid 40 – 20,000 Hz First condenser in the series; studio-like detail for live vocals; requires phantom power Sennheiser e 865
e 935 Dynamic vocal Cardioid 40 – 18,000 Hz Professional vocal mic; natural sound; high feedback resistance; touring standard Sennheiser e 935
e 945 Dynamic vocal Supercardioid 40 – 18,000 Hz More focused than e935; isolates vocals in loud mixes; strong stage presence Sennheiser e 945
e 965 Condenser vocal Switchable cardioid/supercardioid 40 – 20,000 Hz Flagship condenser; dual-diaphragm design; studio-grade clarity for live performance Sennheiser e 965
e 604 Dynamic instrument Cardioid 40 – 18,000 Hz Compact drum mic; clips directly to toms/snare; rugged touring design Sennheiser e 604
e 609 Dynamic instrument Supercardioid 40 – 15,000 Hz Flat-front design; hangs in front of guitar amps; affordable alternative to SM57 Sennheiser e 609
e 906 Dynamic instrument Supercardioid 40 – 18,000 Hz Enhanced version of e609; brighter response; switchable presence filter for tonal shaping Sennheiser e 906
e 602-II Dynamic instrument Cardioid 20 – 16,000 Hz Designed for kick drums and bass instruments; extended low-frequency handling Sennheiser e 602-II
e 902 Dynamic instrument Cardioid 20 – 18,000 Hz Kick drum mic; punchy low end; tailored for live and studio bass capture Sennheiser e 902
e 904 Dynamic instrument Cardioid 40 – 18,000 Hz Compact drum mic; optimized for snare/toms; clip-on mount Sennheiser e 904
e 901 Condenser instrument Half-cardioid 20 – 20,000 Hz Boundary mic for kick drums; placed inside drum shell; captures attack and body Sennheiser e 901
e 908 Condenser instrument Cardioid 30 – 20,000 Hz Clip-on mic for brass and percussion; flexible gooseneck; high SPL handling Sennheiser e 908
e 914 Condenser instrument Cardioid 20 – 20,000 Hz Pencil condenser; overheads, hi-hats, acoustic instruments; studio-quality detail Sennheiser e 914

Evolution Series Structure

The Sennheiser Evolution Series is divided into distinct families of microphones, each tailored for specific applications and user levels:

  • 600 Series – Primarily instrument microphones (e.g., e604 for drums, e609/e906 for guitar amps, e602-II/e902 for kick drums).
  • 800 Series – Entry-level vocal microphones (e.g., e835, e845, e865). These are rugged, easy to use, and designed for accessible performance in speech and singing.[1]
  • 900 Series – Professional vocal microphones (e.g., e935, e945, e965). Marketed as a "harmonically calibrated family" for demanding live sound and touring professionals, offering higher fidelity and reliability.

Key Distinctions

  • The 800 series emphasizes ruggedness and affordability, with straightforward sound shaping for everyday use.
  • The 900 series emphasizes precision, feedback rejection, and consistency, designed for professional touring and engineered live sound.
  • The 600 series complements the 800 series by covering instruments, while the 800 series covers vocals — together forming the entry-level tier.

References

  1. Sennheiser groups the 600 and 800 series together as its entry-level family: 600 for instruments, 800 for vocals. This is what "within 600/800" refers to.