First, thank you for your answers.
I'd like to say I'm french and even less "hot" when it's about electronics subjet... So thank you for your patience. It's greatly appreciated.
If you throttle the signal this way, I assume it's done with some kind of attenuator, which is no good. That means you'd have to add more gain in the recorder. These potentiometers also have the ability to add more noise, if cheap components are used.
I first thought these independant volume controls would have given me kind of a "microphones balance" option with the choice of focusing more on one pair of mics than the other.
I was thinking about getting more highs and middles from the HLSC's (thus the 75%) and more basses from the CA-14's (thus the 25%).
For example, that would have mean set the HLCS's volume (balance) at 10/10 and the CS-14's volume (balance) at 7.5/10.
But that will only result in getting a mix with more gain (and potientially more noise) from the HLCS's and less gain (but still potientially even more noise) from the CS-14's, you're right!
I already did some tests using a cheap (though it has gold-plated connectors) headphone splitter with no volume control option and the two mics I have.
Test lineage : Sony ECM-717 + SP-BMC-12 > headphone splitter > SP-BBox (9V) > Edirol (line-in).
Left and Right channels let me hear both mics, which is a good point. And I don't think I got more noise from the splitter (no potentiometers).
So that's ok, I'd better get a basic fine crafted headphone splitter with no volume controls so it won't affect the mix.
With that being said, I know that each microphone will have a different input level (one will naturally record at a lesser or greater volume than one another).
Which mic specifications should I check to make sure both pairs will record per se at approximatively the same volume? Is it the open circuit sensitivity?
I still need at least an equally balanced mix.
What would be the threshold gap between two mics when you start to get something unbalanced?
Secondly, if the Y-cable is able to pass on the battery power, the voltage is most likely shared too (depending on how the cabling is done), meaning that each pair of mics would receive 4.5V from a 9V battery.
I couldn't notice any problem during the few tests I've made with my ECM-717 & SP-BMC-12 (no high SPL situations). Both sounded as they would have sounded if used separatly.
There's a small battery inside of the ECM-717, so it might have helped...
Considering that, the lineage was :
ECM-717 (powered) + SP-BMC-12 > splitter > SP-BBox > Edirol (line-in).
Does that make any difference or has the ECM-717 only got the power of the SP-BBox?
What kind of trouble am I supposed to get? Not being able to use the mics at full specs (full dynamic range, threshold SPL)?
How can I detect them?
HLSC's requires a bias voltage of 1.5 to 12 volts D.C. (also known as plug-in- power) or a battery module.
CA-14's must have a 5 volt to 9 volts supply.
So one single 9V battery box is not enough to make an uttermost use of each mics best possibilities (full dynamic range, highest possible SPL threshold)?
