Current SOTA in measurement microphones?

Hi all-

Looking to buy a truly superior measurement microphone with an emphasis on excellent impulse/time domain behavior.

The B&K 4133 was the hot product way back in the 70's, but I do not know what mics are in favor now?

I looked at the B&K (and also DPA) sites and did not really find *any* mics listed for speaker/room measurement. Do they no longer make mics for this use or did I miss it somewhere? Where else should I be looking? Thanks.
 
The microphones have not changed and the 4133 is still the go to choice. They have a newer variant, 4191 but it seems identical. There are a number of tradeouts for different applications. You can use a 1/4" microphone but the noise floor is much higher. You do get an upper frequency limit above 100 KHz however above about 60 KHz there are a number of physical effects that constrain accuracy and you need to remove the grid for precision measurements at frequencies above 70 KHz.

The main players are still B&K and now Gras. However there are others. Microtech Gefell and Ono Soki are well respected. A handful of other companies make similar microphones which are all good. And you can get similar results from a much less expensive Earthworks.

When I was discussing this with the key designer at Earthworks he said the best transient results are from the Microtech Gefell MK301. But I'm not sure he had done a comparison between the different B&K's and Gras capsules. I use both a 4135 and a 4136 depending on what I'm measuring. They all have fundamental limitations. I would suggest reading the B&K 4135/4136 manual to get a much better appreciation for the limits of these microphones and how to work with them. https://www.pearl-hifi.com/06_Lit_A...on_Manuals/B&K 4135-36 Instruction Manual.pdf

You will need a preamp and a power supply/measuring amplifier to interface any of those. The new prices on the capsules and preamps etc. are all in the thousands.