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Gear / Technical Help => Cables => Topic started by: Roving Sign on April 16, 2007, 11:13:26 PM
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http://www.coutant.org/data/co94.pdf (has schematic of power supply)
I have a pair of these that I want to try to use tomorrow - I have some mini-XLRs - and I would like to make a cable to go into my Sony D3 DAT 1/8 mic input...
I'd like to be able to just hack a 1/8 stereo mini > L/R RCA...just replace the RCAs with mini-XLRs
The power supply is designed to run off phantom or battery - so I was a little concerned about combining the ground and (-)...
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http://www.coutant.org/data/co94.pdf (has schematic of power supply)
I have a pair of these that I want to try to use tomorrow - I have some mini-XLRs - and I would like to make a cable to go into my Sony D3 DAT 1/8 mic input...
I'd like to be able to just hack a 1/8 stereo mini > L/R RCA...just replace the RCAs with mini-XLRs
The power supply is designed to run off phantom or battery - so I was a little concerned about combining the ground and (-)...
It should not be an issue because there your mic is transformer coupled... I would simply use the 9 volt battery and short out pin 1 to pin 3 and then run the output unbalanced. You should be fine.
Always test this before you go out of course but I see no reason why it would not work.
Chris
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A line transformer should unbalance the signal as well ...
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A line transformer should unbalance the signal as well ...
Not really needed but it would help interface the mic ( if you just bypassed the original transformer all together ) It will help with what ever high impedance mic preamp he is going into. The only problem is if you run two transformers back to back you will get poor signal to noise ratio because of the insertion loss of the two transformers. And that could be as high as 6 db of signal loss before you even get to a preamp. Unless you use a step up transformer :) But then your getting all technical :)
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I have some 500 > 50K Impedence transformers...yay or nay...??? Two transformers does sound odd...
Just going into the "Mic In" on a Sony D3 DAT - It has a -20db attenuator - which I plan on using...
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I have some 500 > 50K Impedence transformers...yay or nay...??? Two transformers does sound odd...
Just going into the "Mic In" on a Sony D3 DAT - It has a -20db attenuator - which I plan on using...
I think your going to be ok just going into the mic input on the dat. I would forget about the extra line transformer for now. In the future you could use something similar to a impedance converter but. For now this should be ok. I would test it first just to see what your levels are like.
Chris
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I used to run mics > PS2 (phantom) > line transformers > modSBM1 (line in) as the PS2 had a balanced output. The line transformers would unbalance the signal so I could run line in to the modSBM1. It also added some gain, I forget how much, 5-6 db maybe, not sure. At times it would be too much depending on location, band, etc and I had to run the sbm1 'low' which is just attenuating the signal. Simple 'clean' setup which worked ...
Just another choice ...