Shure SM7B | Eight Years of Daily Use
Long-Term Review Wired Dynamic Microphone

The Shure SM7B After Eight Years of Daily Use

I bought my SM7B in 2017. $399 at the time from Sweetwater. Eight years later it sits on the same boom arm, same XLR cable, same position six inches from my face.

8yrs
Years of Use
3,000+
Hours Recorded
$399
Original Price
0
Repairs Needed

The capsule has seen somewhere around 3,000 hours of voice work. I've dropped it twice. The windscreen has been replaced once. The mic itself has needed zero repairs.

This is not a review. The SM7B has been reviewed to death since 1973. What I'm recording this time is... a document of what happens to a dynamic microphone after eight years of near-daily use in a home studio environment, and some observations about wired dynamic mics that I've collected along the way.

Professional microphone in studio SM7B · 2017-2025

The Dynamic Microphone Situation in 2025

Condenser microphones dominate the home recording market. The reasons are obvious: higher sensitivity, wider frequency response, lower price points for entry-level models. A $100 condenser will pick up more detail than a $100 dynamic. For bedroom producers and podcasters starting out, the math seems simple.

The math is wrong, but it takes time to figure out why.

Dynamic microphones reject room noise. They don't need phantom power. They handle high SPL without distortion. They're nearly impossible to break. The SM58 I used in college cover bands from 2003 to 2007 is still functioning. It's been dropped on concrete, beer-soaked, and once accidentally run over by a drum hardware case. The grille is dented. The output is unchanged.

Recording studio setup
Dynamic mics: built to last decades

The tradeoff is gain. Dynamic mics need a lot of it. The SM7B's output level sits around -59 dBV/Pa. A typical condenser runs -35 to -40 dBV/Pa. That 20+ dB difference means your preamp is doing serious work. Cheap preamps introduce noise when pushed that hard. This created the cloudlifter/fethead market—inline gain boosters that exist solely because dynamic mics are quiet and most audio interfaces have mediocre preamps.

Output Level Comparison
SM7B (Dynamic)
-59 dBV/Pa
Typical Condenser
-35 to -40 dBV/Pa

My Setup and Usage Pattern

The SM7B lives on a Rode PSA1 arm mounted to a 30mm thick oak desk. Signal chain: SM7B → Triton Audio FetHead → Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 (3rd gen) → Logic Pro. I record voiceover work, podcast episodes, and occasional vocal demos.

Recording happens in a 10x12 foot room with one window, carpet, a couch, and two bookshelves. No acoustic treatment beyond a cheap foam panel behind the mic. This is not an ideal recording space. A large-diaphragm condenser in here would pick up the HVAC, the neighbor's dog, and probably radio signals from passing aircraft.

The SM7B picks up my voice and almost nothing else when positioned correctly.

Boom Arm
Rode PSA1
Desk
30mm Oak
Interface
Scarlett 2i2
DAW
Logic Pro
Signal Chain
SM7B
Triton Audio FetHead
Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 (3rd gen)
Logic Pro

"Correctly" means close. Very close. Four to six inches from the grille, slightly off-axis to reduce plosives. The proximity effect adds low-end warmth at this distance. Move back to twelve inches and the sound thins out noticeably. This is a close-miking tool. Using it as a room mic is technically possible and practically pointless.

What Eight Years of Use Actually Looks Like

The exterior shows wear. The paint on the yoke has rubbed off where it contacts the boom arm mount. The switches (bass rolloff and presence boost) still click firmly into position. I use the bass rolloff engaged; the presence boost stays flat. The foam windscreen developed a small tear after about four years. Replacement windscreens run $14 from Shure. I ordered one, installed it in thirty seconds.

Internally, I have no reason to believe anything has changed. The frequency response sounds identical to recordings from 2017 when A/B compared. The cardioid pattern still rejects sound from the rear effectively. Off-axis coloration remains minimal.

Microphone close-up
Passive design = reliability

I did open the mic once, in 2021, to clean accumulated dust from the grille. The capsule assembly inside is surprisingly simple: the diaphragm, voice coil, and magnet structure sit in a shock-mounted housing. There's not much to go wrong. No tubes, no transformers in the signal path, no active electronics. The passive design is the reliability.

A colleague of mine runs an SM7B that belonged to a radio station in Detroit. The station bought it in 1985. Forty years of broadcast use, four or five hours of airtime daily, and it's still in rotation at his studio. He paid $75 for it at an estate sale. The serial number dates it to the original SM7 production run before the "B" revision.

2017
Purchased from Sweetwater — $399, started daily use
~2021
Windscreen replaced — $14 from Shure, 30-second install. Also opened mic to clean dust from grille.
2025
Still going strong — Zero repairs needed, switches still click firmly, frequency response identical to 2017

The Gain Problem and Its Solutions

The SM7B needs 60+ dB of clean gain for typical voice recording. The Scarlett 2i2's preamp maxes out at 56 dB. This is where the FetHead earns its place in my signal chain.

The FetHead is a small inline device that provides roughly 27 dB of clean gain using phantom power from the interface. It costs about $80. With it engaged, the Scarlett's gain knob sits at the 12 o'clock position for comfortable recording levels. Without it, the knob is cranked to maximum and I'm still hitting -18 dBFS on average speech.

Alternatives exist. The Cloudlifter CL-1 does the same job for $150. The Klark Teknik CT1 is $50 and reportedly works fine, though I haven't tested one personally. The Triton FetHead has been in my chain for six years without issues.

Triton Audio FetHead
~$80
27 dB of clean gain. In my chain for six years without issues.
Cloudlifter CL-1
~$150
Same job, higher price point. Industry standard option.
Klark Teknik CT1
~$50
Budget option, reportedly works fine. Haven't tested personally.

The high-end solution is a better preamp. A Grace M101 or similar boutique preamp has 70+ dB of gain and far cleaner performance than any interface preamp. The cost is $800-1000. For my purposes, the FetHead into the Scarlett delivers results that I cannot distinguish from cleaner signal chains in blind tests of my own recordings. Your mileage may vary. Preamp quality arguments generate more heat than light in audio forums.

Frequency Response and the "Flat" Question

Shure's published frequency response for the SM7B shows a slight presence bump around 5-6 kHz and a gradual roll-off below 200 Hz. The bass rolloff switch adds a high-pass filter around 400 Hz. The presence boost switch adds 2-3 dB in the 2-5 kHz range.

The mic is not flat. No microphone is flat. The SM7B's response is tailored for voice intelligibility. That presence bump adds clarity without sibilance on most voices. The low-end roll-off helps control proximity effect at close distances.

Presence Bump
5-6 kHz
LF Roll-off
<200 Hz
Bass Rolloff Switch
~400 Hz HPF
Presence Boost
+2-3 dB

I've recorded the same voice (mine) through an SM7B, a Neumann U87, and an Electrovoice RE20 on the same day with the same signal chain. The SM7B sat between the other two in brightness—warmer than the U87, slightly more present than the RE20. All three needed different EQ to achieve the same tonal target. Starting points vary. Final results converge.

The U87 recording had more "air" and top-end detail. It also had more room noise, breath sounds, and mouth clicks. The SM7B recording needed less cleanup in post-production. Time is money. I kept using the SM7B.

Microphone Character Post-Production
Neumann U87 More "air" and top-end detail More cleanup needed
Shure SM7B Warmer than U87, more present than RE20 Less cleanup needed
Electrovoice RE20 Slightly less present than SM7B Moderate cleanup

Build Quality Notes

Weight: 765 grams without the windscreen. Heavy for a microphone, but the weight contributes to stability on a boom arm. Cheap lightweight mics tend to drift and sag over time. The SM7B stays where I put it.

The yoke bracket is all-metal construction. The adjustment mechanism uses a clutch system that holds position under the mic's weight without needing to be cranked tight. After eight years the clutch still works. This seems like a minor detail until you've used mics with plastic yokes that crack or strip.

The XLR connector on the rear is recessed into the body. The cable exits at a slight angle. This design reduces strain on the cable and prevents accidental disconnection from side impacts. It also makes the mic slightly longer than competitors.

765 grams

Heavy for stability. Stays where you put it on boom arms.

All-Metal Yoke

Clutch system holds position. Still works after 8 years.

Recessed XLR

Reduces cable strain, prevents accidental disconnection.

Common Complaints I've Encountered

"It needs too much gain."
True. Addressed above. Buy a FetHead or equivalent.
"It sounds dull."
Possibly true depending on the voice and the comparison point. The SM7B is not bright. On naturally bright voices it can sound balanced. On darker voices it may need EQ boost in the high-mids. I add 2 dB at 8 kHz on my voice. The presence boost switch does something similar but isn't quite in the frequency range I want.
"It's overpriced for a dynamic mic."
$399 in 2017, $399 in 2025. No price increase in eight years despite inflation. The RE20 is $449. The Sennheiser MD421 is $379. The SM7B sits in the expected range for professional dynamic broadcast microphones.
"Podcasters ruined it."
The SM7B's appearance on Joe Rogan's podcast created a visibility spike that annoyed some audio engineers. The mic's popularity among podcasters has no effect on its acoustic performance. This complaint is not about the microphone.

Recording Observations

Plosive Handling

Good but not perfect. The internal pop filter catches most plosives at normal speech distances. Hard P and B sounds at four inches with direct on-axis positioning still produce some low-frequency thumps. I speak slightly off-axis. Problem solved.

Handling Noise

Low for a dynamic mic. The internal shock mount works. I can adjust the boom arm during recording without audible thumps in the track. This matters for long-form recording sessions where I might need to shift position.

Bleed Rejection

Excellent. I've recorded voice with a guitar amp running at moderate volume six feet away. The amp is audible in the track but heavily attenuated. A condenser in the same position would have captured a room blend whether I wanted it or not.

The Longevity Question

How long does a dynamic microphone last?

The honest answer is that I don't know the upper limit. The SM58 has been in production since 1966. SM58 units from the 1970s still function. The core technology—a moving coil attached to a diaphragm, suspended in a magnetic field—has no consumable parts under normal use. There's no tube to replace, no capacitor to age, no phantom power circuit to fail.

Environmental factors matter. Humidity can cause corrosion over decades. Extreme temperature swings stress materials. Physical impacts can damage the voice coil or diaphragm. But under reasonable indoor conditions with normal handling, the failure rate seems to be measured in decades rather than years.

My eight-year-old SM7B will probably outlive my career. I have no plans to replace it. I have no reason to replace it.

What I'd Tell Someone Considering a Dynamic Mic

Dynamic microphones make sense if your recording space is imperfect, if you record loud sources, if you prioritize reliability, or if you prefer less post-production cleanup. They require more gain and may need a preamp upgrade or inline booster.

The SM7B specifically makes sense for voice recording in untreated rooms, broadcast applications, and situations where you want a mic you can ignore for years at a time. It does not make sense as a first microphone for someone on a tight budget—the gain requirements add cost. An SM58 at $99 with a FetHead at $80 gets you 80% of the way there for half the price.

Audio recording equipment
A tool that works for the application

I'm not an SM7B evangelist. It's a tool that works for my application. Other tools work for other applications. The RE20 has better plosive rejection. The MD421 has more versatility on instruments. Various large-diaphragm dynamics from Rode and Audio-Technica offer similar performance at lower prices. I haven't tested them extensively because the SM7B does what I need.

Microphone Price (2025) Notes
Shure SM7B $399 No price increase in 8 years despite inflation
Electrovoice RE20 $449 Better plosive rejection
Sennheiser MD421 $379 More versatility on instruments
SM58 + FetHead ~$179 80% of the way there for half the price

Final Thoughts

Eight years from now I'll probably write an update. Assuming the mic is still working, which I expect it will be.

The SM7B Makes Sense If:
Your recording space is imperfect • You record in untreated rooms • You want broadcast-quality results • You prefer less post-production cleanup • You want a mic you can ignore for years at a time

3,000+ hours recorded • Zero repairs • Windscreen replaced once ($14) • Still sounds identical to 2017 recordings

滚动至顶部