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Small Diaphragm Condenser Microphones

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Small-diaphragm condenser microphones – also searched for as small-diaphragm mics or pencil condenser microphones – deliver precise sound for acoustic instruments, overheads, percussion, stereo recording, speech and broadcast applications.

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Shure
in stock
€ 425.00
Sontronics
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 21, 2026
€ 426.00
Austrian Audio
in stock
€ 429.00
Austrian Audio
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 19, 2026
€ 429.00
Austrian Audio
in stock
€ 429.00
Shure
in stock
€ 459.00
Audix
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 16, 2026
€ 507.40
Shure
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 18, 2026
€ 585.00
Neumann
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 18, 2026
€ 599.00
Rode
in stock
€ 619.00
Neumann
in stock
€ 625.00
Neumann
in stock
€ 649.00
beyerdynamic
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 16, 2026
€ 649.00
Neumann
in stock
€ 649.00
Neumann
in stock
€ 649.00
beyerdynamic
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 16, 2026
€ 659.90
Audix
in stock
€ 659.90
Neumann
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 18, 2026
€ 666.00
Warm Audio
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 19, 2026
€ 693.00
Warm Audio
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 19, 2026
€ 699.00
Neumann
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 18, 2026
€ 710.70
AKG
in stock
€ 725.00
Sontronics
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 19, 2026
€ 741.30
Microtech Gefell
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 16, 2026
€ 755.00
Soyuz
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 21, 2026
€ 759.00
Schoeps
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 16, 2026
€ 759.00
Schoeps
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 25, 2026
€ 774.00
Schoeps
in stock
€ 774.00
Schoeps
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 16, 2026
€ 795.00
Schoeps
available soon, Delivery date: Jun 16, 2026
€ 795.00

Buy small-diaphragm condenser microphones – precise mics for studio, stage and instruments

What is a small-diaphragm condenser microphone?

A small-diaphragm condenser microphone is a condenser microphone with a compact capsule that captures sound with a direct, finely detailed response. Small-diaphragm microphones are also often searched for as pencil condenser microphones and are especially popular when transients, high frequencies and spatial details need to be reproduced cleanly.

In the studio, on stage or in mobile recording setups, they are used wherever a natural sound image and accurate capture of the source are more important than a strongly coloured microphone character.

Instruments

For acoustic guitar, strings, piano, brass, woodwinds and other detailed sound sources.

Drums

For overheads, hi-hat, cymbals, percussion and spacious drum recordings.

Stereo

For stereo pairs, ensemble recording, choir, room sound and classic mic techniques.

Speech

For lecterns, moderation, film sound, broadcast and precise speech transmission.

Typical applications

With acoustic instruments, small-diaphragm condenser microphones help capture attack, articulation and overtones clearly. On drums and percussion, they are often used for overheads, hi-hat or cymbals because they reproduce fast impulses very accurately.

Matched pairs are especially useful for stereo recording. They are suitable for XY, ORTF or AB techniques as well as choir, ensemble, piano, room sound and acoustic live recordings.

Small diaphragm or large diaphragm?

Small-diaphragm condenser microphones are usually the better choice for instruments, overheads, stereo setups and natural room capture. They respond quickly, often sound neutral and reproduce the source with high precision.

Large-diaphragm condenser microphones are often chosen for vocals and spoken voice when a bigger, warmer or more characterful sound is desired. A small-diaphragm microphone can still be useful for vocals, for example with choir, classical singing, ensemble work or discreet live and broadcast setups.

Polar patterns and capsules

The polar pattern determines from which direction the microphone captures sound most strongly. Cardioid is versatile and suitable for many studio and instrument applications. Omni sounds more open and captures more room sound, while supercardioid and hypercardioid provide tighter focus.

Models with interchangeable capsules or multiple polar patterns offer additional flexibility. This allows the microphone to be adapted more easily to the room, distance, instrument and desired sound image.

Cardioid

Versatile for instruments, overheads, speech and general studio use.

Omni

For open, natural recordings with more room ambience.

Supercardioid & hypercardioid

For tighter focus on stage, in broadcast applications or in close setups.

Stereo pair

For matched stereo recordings, overheads, ensembles and room sound.

Connection, phantom power and accessories

Most small-diaphragm condenser microphones connect via XLR and require a suitable power supply, often 48 V phantom power. This is usually provided by a mixing console, audio interface, recorder or microphone preamp.

Depending on the application, accessories such as a microphone clip, stereo bar, windshield, shock mount, pouch, case or suitable stands may also be important. For mobile recording, outdoor use and lecterns, mounting, wind protection and clean cable routing should be planned carefully.

Key buying criteria

The main question is whether the microphone will be used primarily for instruments, overheads, stereo recording, speech, stage or broadcast. This determines the polar pattern, design, accessory requirements and expectations for SPL handling, self-noise and power supply.

  • Application: instruments, overheads, percussion, speech, stage, broadcast or stereo recording.
  • Polar pattern: cardioid, supercardioid, hypercardioid or omni depending on the room and the desired control.
  • Sound: natural highs, fast transients, low noise and balanced frequency response.
  • Stereo: matched stereo pairs for overheads, ensembles, choir, piano and room sound.
  • Connection: check XLR and suitable phantom power in the existing setup.
  • Accessories: clip, stereo bar, windshield, shock mount, pouch or case depending on the application.

FAQ – Small-diaphragm condenser microphones

What is a small-diaphragm condenser microphone?

A small-diaphragm condenser microphone is a condenser microphone with a compact capsule that captures sound precisely and in detail. It is often used for instruments, overheads, stereo recording and speech.

What is a small-diaphragm condenser microphone suitable for?

It is especially suitable for acoustic instruments, drum overheads, hi-hat, percussion, choir, ensemble, room sound and precise speech recording.

What is the difference compared with a large-diaphragm condenser microphone?

Small-diaphragm condenser microphones are often used for instruments, overheads and stereo recording. Large-diaphragm condenser microphones are often chosen for vocals and spoken voice when a bigger or more characterful sound is desired.

Does a small-diaphragm condenser microphone need phantom power?

Many models require phantom power, often 48 V. The supply usually comes from a mixing console, audio interface, recorder or microphone preamp.

When is a stereo pair useful?

A stereo pair is useful for overheads, choir, ensemble, acoustic guitar, piano, room sound and classic stereo microphone techniques.

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