Measured: iPhone 17 Pro microphone frequency response and directivity

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Frequency Response

I measured the frequency response of the iPhone 17 Pro microphone by positioning a lab-grade reference microphone (PCB model 378B02) approximately 1mm away from the phone (facing the mic) in our anechoic chamber. The reference mic was connected directly to input 1 of a model 485B39 dual channel USB interface. The iPhone microphone signal was routed directly to a USB-C to 3.5mm headphone adapter using SignalScope’s audio play through function (with measurement mode enabled) and from there to input 2 of the 485B39. The response between the 2 microphones was measured with SignalScope’s Dual FFT Analyzer (on a Mac) with the microphones facing toward and away from a loudspeaker which was generating a swept sine excitation signal. The 2 microphone jig was rotated 180 degrees between measurements and the individual measurements were then averaged. The average measurement was corrected with the factory-supplied frequency response of the reference microphone for both pressure and free-field acoustic sensitivity. The graph, below was generated with SignalScope.

iPhone 17 Pro microphone frequency response, corrected with factory-supplied data for the pressure (blue) and free-field (green) response of the PCB 378B02 reference mic.
iPhone 17 Pro microphone frequency response, corrected with factory-supplied data for the pressure (blue) and free-field (green) response of the PCB 378B02 reference mic.
iPhone 17 Pro and PCB 378B02 positioned for frequency response measurement in an anechoic chamber.

Directivity

One obvious change in the iPhone 17 Pro microphone is that it sits on the opposite side of the USB-C connector than in previous iPhone models.

iPhone 17 Pro primary (bottom) microphone location

Our automated directivity measurement system, built into our anechoic chamber, made it easy to account for the change in microphone location. The 1/3 octave sound levels were measured as the phone was rotated around its microphone at 1.5 degree increments. A single, full-range, coaxial-driver loudspeaker generated the broadband test signal that ran for the duration of the measurements. Spectra in all resulting measurements were then accessed to generate a set of polar data for each frequency band. Several of these polar data sets were loaded into SignalScope’s Polar Plot tool to generate the graph, below.

iPhone 17 Pro Bottom Microphone Directivity at 1, 4, 8, 12.5, and 16 kHz

Note: 1/24-octave smoothing is applied to the frequency response data. No smoothing is applied to the polar plot data.

3 comments

  • ben

    I’m a little surprised and even puzzled by these results. I expect to comment more on this in the near future (with more graphs, of course).

  • Robert Hedeen

    Looks pretty good to me, especially for its intended use – voice communication. Those wild swings above 10 kHz are diffraction effects, where the sound field interacts with the physical surface of the microphone, Research mics like PCB fiddle with diaphragm tension and other tricks to smooth these out. Also, don’t take the grid off of the PCB mic – that’s one of the tricks.

    • ben

      The variations in the high frequency response are significantly greater than those in previous iPhone Pro models (which were measured relative to the same PCB mic in the same manner)–that’s the concern. The directivity at 16 kHz is also a puzzler.
      As for the grid, or screen, which covers the PCB mic diaphragm, that begs the question of the best way to measure the response of the iPhone microphone. In the IEC 61904 standard, under “Principles of pressure calibration by comparison,” it states, “the pressure sensitivity can only be realised in principle for microphones from which the protection grid can be removed and the diaphragm exposed to the sound pressure stimulus.” Removing the grid allows for the microphone diaphragm to be placed closer to the iPhone microphone, which should increase the likelihood of the two mics being exposed to the same pressure. However, the standard is designed for microphones with circular shape and generally, though not in all cases, they are expected to be of the same size (diameter). Clearly, a MEMS microphone embedded in an iPhone doesn’t meet this expectation.

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