
Plate Reverb. Many people ask me about this and I usually tell
them to listen to some records from the '70s and '80s and look for
reverb with a thick, pillowy sound that doesn't obscure the vocal
yet doesn't quite sound like an actual room. The sound itself, as
you'll see, is created through mechanically vibrating a plate of
steel, picking up the decaying vibrations and re-amplifying them
much the same way a spring reverb works. They're hard to find used
these days, and we were lucky enough to hook up with Bob Buontempo
and obtain a reworking of his article from 1983, originally written
for Modern Recording and Music. Thanks Bob and Joe!
Larry Crane.

Figure 1. The finished reverberation
plate.
In 1983 I was the owner of a 2” 16-track studio. One
of the things that really separated the sounds of the recordings
we could get from the sounds of the recordings made in major facilities
was the quality of the reverb. Spring reverb was the only affordable
system for small studios at that time, since EMT plate reverbs ran
almost $9,000! EMT's patent was about to expire, and when it did,
competitors came out withy similar products. While they were cheaper,
they still averaged $2,500! So an engineer who worked with me, Joe
Errico, and I researched plate reverbs and came up with an affordable
way to build one. All of the design updates that Joe and I have
made since the original article will be printed: *[in this manner]*.
- Bob Buontempo.
This article presents plans for making a plate reverb unit, which
won't require any electronics other than your mixer and a headphone
amp. (If you don't have these items, you're not ready for a reverb
plate anyway.) The construction cost will be between $100--$500,
(depending upon what components you already own), a lot less than
the $2,500-$8,500 for commercially -available units. The article
will describe how to find and evaluate the materials needed, construct
the frame, mount and tune the plate, fit the driver and pickups,
and add dampening to the plate. It concludes with some "tricks"
and techniques for enhancing plate sound.
For the complete do-it-yourselfer, diagrams, photos, and a parts
list are included. A kit providing mounting/isolation hardware,
driver, pickups, pre-amps, and tuning CD is also available. The
individual parts are also offered separately. The kit may help facilitate
the project by eliminating the hardest task: locating and evaluating
the required parts. *[Joe and I have assembled an inventory
of the most difficult to obtain components. See Last Page for details,
i.e. Web Site, Plate Reverb MP3s, Order Form, etc.]*
Almost everyone with a knowledge of recording is familiar with
spring reverbs, or at least with their sound. *[They
were the most common type reverbs used in studios when this article
was originally written. Now Digital reverberation units are the
type most often used.]* Most low-end or semi-pro reverb
units were based on the spring principle, as are most musical instrument
amps or accessories with reverb. That "spring sound" can
range from excellent to "under water," depending on the
unit and the way it is used.
The reason spring units sound the way they do is because that is
exactly what they are; springs. There are usually several rows of
them, possibly with two or three strung in a series. Just like the
springs on your screen door, they will "twang" or "boing"
when plucked. However, instead of being plucked, the reverb springs
are excited at one end by a driver, and miced at the other end by
a pickup ... and so are the twang and boing, especially on transient
material.
Although some designers have used tricks to smooth out their sound
with excellent results, they may still have spring characteristics
inherent in their sound, as well as a limited bandwidth, especially
at high frequencies (8 kHz+).
Plate reverb has none of these drawbacks, although it can go from
sounding like a true concert hall to an oil drum being banged with
an ax in the subway, again depending on its application and who's
using it.
Typically, the plate is a large (one by two meters, or 39.37 by
78.74 inches) sheet of steel suspended in a tubular steel frame.
In theory, the plate simulates a large concert hall, or church,
with a decay time (RT-60; the time required for the level of the
reverb to diminish by 60 dB) of approximately five seconds at approximately
500 Hz. A driver attached to the plate excites it, and as the sound
waves travel through it, the plate flexes. The plate's motion is
then picked up by one or two contact mics, and added to the dry
signal at the mixer. Transients do not twang or boing, but behave
much as they would in a reverberant room, sounding smooth and natural.
As an additional feature, incorporating a damping plate to change
the decay time of the reverberated signal can be included in the
design.
It was at the Broadcast Technical Institute in Nuremberg, and later
at the Institute for Broadcast Engineering in Hamburg, West Germany,
that the first reverberation plate using these principles was developed.
EMT (in Germany) patented and made the only available units until
the patents ran out a few *[20]* years
ago. Since then, several American and foreign companies have come
out with newer units. The plans presented here are of a hybrid unit
that can be optimized to the design of any of the commercial units
you may favor.
Talk Plate Reverb with Bob
Buontempo in his PSW Rec Pit forum.
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