Adapting a microphone to remote phantom power

  • Thread starter David Nebenzahl
  • Start date
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote:

Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelations@hotmail.com> wrote:

That wasn't possible with early phantom mics, using tube preamps.

I'm not aware of any tube based condensor mics that used phantom power
as we talk of it now. They usually had dedicated multipole connectors
rather than the now ubiquitous 3 pin XLR.

Rather obvious when you think of the technology then - and the restricted
current available with phantom power.

There's been quite a revival in valve mics and I've a feeling there may be
at least one which runs off phantom. But the majority still use a
dedicated PS and multicore cable.
Yup, I've seen a few. Usually the PSU is finished in that Hammerite style
paint in a silver grey.

Graham
 
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote:

David Nebenzahl <nobody@but.us.chickens> wrote:
In fact the Wikipedia article recognises this:

=====================================================================
The low-current 3 to 5 V supply provided at the microphone jack of
some consumer equipment, such as portable recorders and computer sound
cards, is sometimes called "phantom power."
=====================================================================

Yes. Wonder who added that to the original article?

You can easily find out: just check the "history" tab and trace it back.
(But it'll probably turn out to be an "anonymous IP", meaning that it
could be anybody, qualified or not.)

And there's really no such thing as an "original article" on Wikipedia,
as all articles are constantly undergoing rewriting for better or worse
(often the latter).

Well you can take it from me the current explanation is pretty decent and
rather better than many others you'll find.
I've amended the entry slightly to make it clearer.

Graaham
 
On 4/14/2009 4:58 AM Eeyore spake thus:

"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote:

[someone else] wrote:

In fact the Wikipedia article recognises this:

=====================================================================
The low-current 3 to 5 V supply provided at the microphone jack of
some consumer equipment, such as portable recorders and computer sound
cards, is sometimes called "phantom power."
=====================================================================

Yes. Wonder who added that to the original article?

You can easily find out: just check the "history" tab and trace it back.
(But it'll probably turn out to be an "anonymous IP", meaning that it
could be anybody, qualified or not.)

And there's really no such thing as an "original article" on Wikipedia,
as all articles are constantly undergoing rewriting for better or worse
(often the latter).

Well you can take it from me the current explanation is pretty decent and
rather better than many others you'll find.

I've amended the entry slightly to make it clearer.
Aha! So much for relying on Wikipedia as a reliable source of information.


--
Save the Planet
Kill Yourself

- motto of the Church of Euthanasia (http://www.churchofeuthanasia.org/)
 
On Mon, 13 Apr 2009 23:36:55 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
<dave@davenoise.co.uk> put finger to keyboard and composed:

In article <mc97u4l1mb2eqbber81mbhvqag6suc1c2a@4ax.com>,
Franc Zabkar <fzabkar@iinternode.on.net> wrote:

OK, I see now ...

http://www.mediacollege.com/audio/phantom-power/

That's not the best of explanations. Phantom power is distributed from a
central PS to the mixer inputs via standoff resistors. Which limit the
amount of current available to any single mic. Necessary to prevent a line
or mic fault bringing down the entire supply.
Maybe these two examples (Method 1 and Method 2, also reproduced at
the epanorama site) explain it better:

http://www.uneeda-audio.com/pzm/pzm_ch.htm

The same DC current flows from hot to ground, and cold to ground.
Therefore the current flowing between hot and cold is zero.

- Franc Zabkar
--
Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email.
 
In article <55p9u4lt5fd7k4imp9uti135s5nejude0s@4ax.com>,
Franc Zabkar <fzabkar@iinternode.on.net> wrote:
On Mon, 13 Apr 2009 23:36:55 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
dave@davenoise.co.uk> put finger to keyboard and composed:

In article <mc97u4l1mb2eqbber81mbhvqag6suc1c2a@4ax.com>,
Franc Zabkar <fzabkar@iinternode.on.net> wrote:

OK, I see now ...

http://www.mediacollege.com/audio/phantom-power/

That's not the best of explanations. Phantom power is distributed from
a central PS to the mixer inputs via standoff resistors. Which limit
the amount of current available to any single mic. Necessary to prevent
a line or mic fault bringing down the entire supply.

Maybe these two examples (Method 1 and Method 2, also reproduced at
the epanorama site) explain it better:

http://www.uneeda-audio.com/pzm/pzm_ch.htm

The same DC current flows from hot to ground, and cold to ground.
Therefore the current flowing between hot and cold is zero.
It's fine. But the Wiki piece gives a good description for those who don't
need to know how to do it.

--
*Real women don't have hot flashes, they have power surges.

Dave Plowman dave@davenoise.co.uk London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
 
On 4/11/2009 1:48 PM Franc Zabkar spake thus:

The supply for each of the L and R microphone inputs is derived from a
buffered, zener regulated 2.6V source. The series resistor is 7.5K.
For comparison purposes, the condenser elements within Sony's ECM-737
mike are each powered from a 4.8V supply via 10K resistors.

I thought that the OP may be measuring the voltage while the mike was
connected, but it appears that 2.8V was the O/C voltage of the
Walkman.

This is the relevant section of the circuit:

2.6V |-- 7K5 --> L
IC201 | |
5.9V o--- R ---+---------+---- buffer -+- 1K ----+---|
| | | |
ZD --- 220uF 47uF --- |-- 7K5 --> R
HZ3ALL | --- ---
_|_ _|_ _|_
= = =
Franc--thanks for taking the trouble to draw this out. I've been looking
all over the schematic, and so far I can't find anything to the left of
IC201 in your "drawing" (the 220 uf cap, zener, etc.) Can't see D301 at
all on the schematic. The only zener I can find is one on the DC-DC
board, but nothing there is labled in the diagram. Help!

(I'm not considering modifying the recorder, just satisfying my
curiosity as to how the "plug-in power" works.)


--
Save the Planet
Kill Yourself

- motto of the Church of Euthanasia (http://www.churchofeuthanasia.org/)
 
David Nebenzahl wrote:

On 4/14/2009 4:58 AM Eeyore spake thus:
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote:
[someone else] wrote:

In fact the Wikipedia article recognises this:

=====================================================================
The low-current 3 to 5 V supply provided at the microphone jack of
some consumer equipment, such as portable recorders and computer sound
cards, is sometimes called "phantom power."
=====================================================================

Yes. Wonder who added that to the original article?

You can easily find out: just check the "history" tab and trace it back.
(But it'll probably turn out to be an "anonymous IP", meaning that it
could be anybody, qualified or not.)

And there's really no such thing as an "original article" on Wikipedia,
as all articles are constantly undergoing rewriting for better or worse
(often the latter).

Well you can take it from me the current explanation is pretty decent and
rather better than many others you'll find.

I've amended the entry slightly to make it clearer.

Aha! So much for relying on Wikipedia as a reliable source of information.
Go and take a look. I am a registered contributor.

Graham
 
Franc Zabkar wrote:

On Mon, 13 Apr 2009 23:36:55 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
dave@davenoise.co.uk> put finger to keyboard and composed:
Franc Zabkar <fzabkar@iinternode.on.net> wrote:

OK, I see now ...

http://www.mediacollege.com/audio/phantom-power/

That's not the best of explanations. Phantom power is distributed from a
central PS to the mixer inputs via standoff resistors. Which limit the
amount of current available to any single mic. Necessary to prevent a line
or mic fault bringing down the entire supply.

Maybe these two examples (Method 1 and Method 2, also reproduced at
the epanorama site) explain it better:

http://www.uneeda-audio.com/pzm/pzm_ch.htm

The same DC current flows from hot to ground, and cold to ground.
Therefore the current flowing between hot and cold is zero.
Correct. Hence minimising any noise contribution from the phantom PSU. Having
said which they are usually very well regulated anyway.

Graham
 
On 4/15/2009 8:11 AM Eeyore spake thus:

David Nebenzahl wrote:

On 4/14/2009 4:58 AM Eeyore spake thus:

"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote:
[someone else] wrote:

In fact the Wikipedia article recognises this:

=====================================================================
The low-current 3 to 5 V supply provided at the microphone jack of
some consumer equipment, such as portable recorders and computer sound
cards, is sometimes called "phantom power."
=====================================================================

Yes. Wonder who added that to the original article?

You can easily find out: just check the "history" tab and trace it back.
(But it'll probably turn out to be an "anonymous IP", meaning that it
could be anybody, qualified or not.)

And there's really no such thing as an "original article" on Wikipedia,
as all articles are constantly undergoing rewriting for better or worse
(often the latter).

Well you can take it from me the current explanation is pretty decent and
rather better than many others you'll find.

I've amended the entry slightly to make it clearer.

Aha! So much for relying on Wikipedia as a reliable source of information.

Go and take a look. I am a registered contributor.
Yes, I see you seem to be the entity known as "Pasoundman" there. And
looking through your "contributions", I can see you tried to muck up the
article on total harmonic distortion, resulting in a page that would
have completely baffled anyone going there looking for information on
the subject:

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Total_harmonic_distortion&diff=prev&oldid=89170973

However, that edit, which the subsequent editor termed "vandalism", was
quickly reverted (in less than an hour), and your content is gone to
this day:

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Total_harmonic_distortion&diff=89176930&oldid=89170973


--
Save the Planet
Kill Yourself

- motto of the Church of Euthanasia (http://www.churchofeuthanasia.org/)
 
On Tue, 14 Apr 2009 16:08:57 -0700, David Nebenzahl
<nobody@but.us.chickens> put finger to keyboard and composed:

On 4/11/2009 1:48 PM Franc Zabkar spake thus:

The supply for each of the L and R microphone inputs is derived from a
buffered, zener regulated 2.6V source. The series resistor is 7.5K.
For comparison purposes, the condenser elements within Sony's ECM-737
mike are each powered from a 4.8V supply via 10K resistors.

I thought that the OP may be measuring the voltage while the mike was
connected, but it appears that 2.8V was the O/C voltage of the
Walkman.

This is the relevant section of the circuit:

2.6V |-- 7K5 --> L
IC201 | |
5.9V o--- R ---+---------+---- buffer -+- 1K ----+---|
| | | |
ZD --- 220uF 47uF --- |-- 7K5 --> R
HZ3ALL | --- ---
_|_ _|_ _|_
= = =

Franc--thanks for taking the trouble to draw this out. I've been looking
all over the schematic, and so far I can't find anything to the left of
IC201 in your "drawing" (the 220 uf cap, zener, etc.) Can't see D301 at
all on the schematic. The only zener I can find is one on the DC-DC
board, but nothing there is labled in the diagram. Help!

(I'm not considering modifying the recorder, just satisfying my
curiosity as to how the "plug-in power" works.)
Look at pins 20, 21, and 22 of IC101 in the other channel. Pin 20 goes
to the zener. Pin 20 of IC201 would also go to the same zener,
although it is not shown explicitly because the two channels are
mostly identical (see the note "R-CH is the same as L-CH"). Pin 22 of
IC101 terminates in a capacitor, and is not used (?), whereas pin 22
of IC201 goes to the mike's power circuit and to the LED board.

- Franc Zabkar
--
Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email.
 
On 4/15/2009 1:26 PM Franc Zabkar spake thus:

On Tue, 14 Apr 2009 16:08:57 -0700, David Nebenzahl
nobody@but.us.chickens> put finger to keyboard and composed:

Franc--thanks for taking the trouble to draw this out. I've been looking
all over the schematic, and so far I can't find anything to the left of
IC201 in your "drawing" (the 220 uf cap, zener, etc.) Can't see D301 at
all on the schematic. The only zener I can find is one on the DC-DC
board, but nothing there is labled in the diagram. Help!

(I'm not considering modifying the recorder, just satisfying my
curiosity as to how the "plug-in power" works.)

Look at pins 20, 21, and 22 of IC101 in the other channel. Pin 20 goes
to the zener. Pin 20 of IC201 would also go to the same zener,
although it is not shown explicitly because the two channels are
mostly identical (see the note "R-CH is the same as L-CH"). Pin 22 of
IC101 terminates in a capacitor, and is not used (?), whereas pin 22
of IC201 goes to the mike's power circuit and to the LED board.
Thanks again for the quick reply.

I'm stumped. I must be making some really dumb mistake. Looking at the
schematic, pin 20 of IC101 (left channel) goes across and down to an
unspecified pin in IC201, connecting to C138 and C305 on the way. I
don't see any zener nor any connection to one. I do see the capacitor on
pin 22 (C132) and how pin 22 of IC201 goes to the mike's power circuit.

Can you tell me where (grid coordinates) D301 is? I can't find it at all.

I'm viewing the schematics in the service manual and its supplement that
you gave us a link to. Am I missing something really obvious here? Or do
you have another diagram?


--
Save the Planet
Kill Yourself

- motto of the Church of Euthanasia (http://www.churchofeuthanasia.org/)
 
On Wed, 15 Apr 2009 14:47:38 -0700, David Nebenzahl
<nobody@but.us.chickens> put finger to keyboard and composed:

On 4/15/2009 1:26 PM Franc Zabkar spake thus:

On Tue, 14 Apr 2009 16:08:57 -0700, David Nebenzahl
nobody@but.us.chickens> put finger to keyboard and composed:

Franc--thanks for taking the trouble to draw this out. I've been looking
all over the schematic, and so far I can't find anything to the left of
IC201 in your "drawing" (the 220 uf cap, zener, etc.) Can't see D301 at
all on the schematic. The only zener I can find is one on the DC-DC
board, but nothing there is labled in the diagram. Help!

(I'm not considering modifying the recorder, just satisfying my
curiosity as to how the "plug-in power" works.)

Look at pins 20, 21, and 22 of IC101 in the other channel. Pin 20 goes
to the zener. Pin 20 of IC201 would also go to the same zener,
although it is not shown explicitly because the two channels are
mostly identical (see the note "R-CH is the same as L-CH"). Pin 22 of
IC101 terminates in a capacitor, and is not used (?), whereas pin 22
of IC201 goes to the mike's power circuit and to the LED board.

Thanks again for the quick reply.

I'm stumped. I must be making some really dumb mistake. Looking at the
schematic, pin 20 of IC101 (left channel) goes across and down to an
unspecified pin in IC201, connecting to C138 and C305 on the way. I
don't see any zener nor any connection to one. I do see the capacitor on
pin 22 (C132) and how pin 22 of IC201 goes to the mike's power circuit.
AFAICT, there is only one zener. It regulates the power for both
channels.

Can you tell me where (grid coordinates) D301 is? I can't find it at all.
D301 is adjacent to C305, at coordinates E15. Right above all three
components is a label, "D301 HZ3ALL".

I'm viewing the schematics in the service manual and its supplement that
you gave us a link to. Am I missing something really obvious here? Or do
you have another diagram?
I'm looking at page 19 of the service manual.

- Franc Zabkar
--
Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email.
 
On 4/15/2009 3:00 PM Franc Zabkar spake thus:

On Wed, 15 Apr 2009 14:47:38 -0700, David Nebenzahl
nobody@but.us.chickens> put finger to keyboard and composed:

Can you tell me where (grid coordinates) D301 is? I can't find it at all.

D301 is adjacent to C305, at coordinates E15. Right above all three
components is a label, "D301 HZ3ALL".

I'm viewing the schematics in the service manual and its supplement that
you gave us a link to. Am I missing something really obvious here? Or do
you have another diagram?

I'm looking at page 19 of the service manual.
Ack! No wonder: I was looking at the manual supplement, which omits the
zener. Like I said, a dumb mistake. Thanks!


--
Save the Planet
Kill Yourself

- motto of the Church of Euthanasia (http://www.churchofeuthanasia.org/)
 
On Wed, 15 Apr 2009 15:16:48 -0700, David Nebenzahl
<nobody@but.us.chickens> put finger to keyboard and composed:

On 4/15/2009 3:00 PM Franc Zabkar spake thus:

On Wed, 15 Apr 2009 14:47:38 -0700, David Nebenzahl
nobody@but.us.chickens> put finger to keyboard and composed:

Can you tell me where (grid coordinates) D301 is? I can't find it at all.

D301 is adjacent to C305, at coordinates E15. Right above all three
components is a label, "D301 HZ3ALL".

I'm viewing the schematics in the service manual and its supplement that
you gave us a link to. Am I missing something really obvious here? Or do
you have another diagram?

I'm looking at page 19 of the service manual.

Ack! No wonder: I was looking at the manual supplement, which omits the
zener. Like I said, a dumb mistake. Thanks!
As you say, the zener has been deleted from the parts list in the
supplement, yet pin 20 of the IC is still sitting at 2.6V. Maybe the
potential divider inside the IC sets the voltage.

- Franc Zabkar
--
Please remove one 'i' from my address when replying by email.
 
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote:
In article <49E3C34C.CF13C6C@hotmail.com>,
Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelations@hotmail.com> wrote:
That wasn't possible with early phantom mics, using tube preamps.

I'm not aware of any tube based condensor mics that used phantom power
as we talk of it now. They usually had dedicated multipole connectors
rather than the now ubiquitous 3 pin XLR.

Rather obvious when you think of the technology then - and the restricted
current available with phantom power.

There's been quite a revival in valve mics and I've a feeling there may be
at least one which runs off phantom. But the majority still use a
dedicated PS and multicore cable.

I guess you never saw any of the battery powered tube hearing aids?
They used less power than a mic preamp, due to their directly heated
filaments.

--
You can't have a sense of humor, if you have no sense!
 
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote:
In article <J-mdnYIQiM3DHX7UnZ2dnUVZ_vqdnZ2d@earthlink.com>,
Michael A. Terrell <mike.terrell@earthlink.net> wrote:

If you even gave it a modicum of thought you'd realise the ability to have
one connector and type of cable for virtually any microphone has real
benefits. But then thinking beyond the end of your limited experience
isn't your strong point.

Jackass. standardized connectors is a given, in any single setting.
There are places where a common XLR type connector is not suitable, due
to heat, humidity, or vibration.


I'd have said it being picked up on the actual audio output to be more of
a problem, wouldn't you? If you ever thought before typing.

Sigh. do you always spout such nonsense? Hum can come from anywhere,
not gust the output. Think about that.


Why do you think they use HF AC to power the lamp used in film
projectors, instead of DC?
Its easier to rectify & filter a power source well above the needed
audio bandwidth, than deal with electrical noise is some locations. try
your DC power in places near a substation, where the AC magnetic field
can affect video monitors, or a high power transmitter causes ingression
problems. No circuit is a perfect balance in those situations.

Think you'd be better telling the mic makers that. I'm sure they'd be
grateful for your original thinking. After all they don't have a single
decent engineer between them...

Yawn.
and be high enough that it couldn't interact with the audio.


Given any thought to cable design? And the lengths those often are?
Over a mile is common.

Yawn. At a mile I would look into fiber or an RF link.

You might well look into it. Of course you wouldn't be funding it...

Of course I wouldn't. Why would I pay for something the customer
would own? I worked on large projects, where zero downtime was a huge
factor. A mile of fiber is chap, compared to copper when there is no
right of way. It can be lashed to telephone or CATV trunklines, since
it is non conductive. That is a hell of a lot cheaper than digging a
mile long trench 24 to 60 inches deep, and running a mile of 2" schedule
80 electrical PVC, with service vaults every quarter mile. Most
telephone, and all broadband internet around here is fiber optic to less
than two miles for the houses. FIOS may be available in the are in a
few years, where telephone, internet and cable TV come to the house on a
single fiber optic cable. Of course that won't happen in a country
where the post office is in charge of communications. Do they still
bill you, per call on land lines?

Fiber is common as dirt in the US. They even run it to homes for
telephone service, because it is cheaper and more reliable than copper
these days. I keep forgetting that fiber and other advanced technology
isn't available in third world countries.


Try running a mile of audio cable in a place with a lot of lighting is
sheer stupidity.

Is this called thread drift? Or just the effects of alcohol?

If its due to alcohol, then stop drinking. I have never been drunk,
since I don't drink. That just leaves you as the alcoholic. Typical
british BS. You try to slander anyone who won't kiss your stinking ass.


I had a lightning strike at my last house. It hit the buried phone
cable and vaporized the copper in 1.2 miles of buried, shielded six pair
cable. then it wiped out the subscriber interface circuit for mine, and
15 other houses and destroyed the copper pair back to the central office.

I had a T studio building hit by lightning as well. it blew out
chunks of concrete, and wiped out our computer network, 11 GHz STL and
four C-band LNBs, most of the satellite receivers and the 1A2 telephone
system I replaced a lot of damaged wire.

All with fibre optic I assume? Wouldn't be a problem to one of your
talents.

Yawn. Such a big mouth, and small brain. Show me a fiber optic cable
that carries DC & RF at 11 GHz. What I did do was reroute the cabling
to the tower & STL in bonded & grounded 4" EMT and move the equipment
rack to the closest corner of the building to minimize the length of all
cables to reduce any induced current in any future strikes. That was 20
years ago, and there has been no damage from subsequent strikes.

The strike at my house was on an old pole building used for a tool
shed & workshop. It vaporized the antenna, coax and mount. Some pieces
were over 100 feet away. There is nothing that can protect you from a
direct strike and fiber wasn't common 20 years ago. Tell me, jackass,
how you run 240 VAC through fiber optics? There was no audio, video, or
data run to the outbuilding, and the telephone line was direct burial
copper, since that was what the phone company used. The lightning
arched from the mast to the electrical service after it vaporized the 8
AWG ground wire at the antenna. That burned the insulation off the
underground cable, back to the ground rod at the pole pig. The
telephone line ran parallel to the electrical line, about 18 inches
away, and induced enough current into it, that it vaporized that pair to
the pedestal, a half mile away. You have no idea what its like to have
storms with thousands of lightning strikes in an hour. The lightening
detection system used by NOAA would show some whole towns covered in
strikes. AM radio stations suffer from a lot of strikes, as well. A
friend of mine is still servicing AM sites and has brought me the
remains of several spark gaps that exploded, or vaporized, and only left
part of the mounts.


There are some records that were released with the mics acting up.

All of them?

No. I can only think of a couple, but I'm sure you wouldn't
recognize the name, or listen to that type of American music, so why
bother?
Of course, you don't know what I'm talking about.

I doubt if even you do.

I doubt that you know anything useful.


--
You can't have a sense of humor, if you have no sense!
 
In article <2dGdnZ2fIsNChHHUnZ2dnUVZ_o6dnZ2d@earthlink.com>,
Michael A. Terrell <mike.terrell@earthlink.net> wrote:

"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote:

In article <49E3C34C.CF13C6C@hotmail.com>,
Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelations@hotmail.com> wrote:
That wasn't possible with early phantom mics, using tube preamps.

I'm not aware of any tube based condensor mics that used phantom
power as we talk of it now. They usually had dedicated multipole
connectors rather than the now ubiquitous 3 pin XLR.

Rather obvious when you think of the technology then - and the
restricted current available with phantom power.

There's been quite a revival in valve mics and I've a feeling there
may be at least one which runs off phantom. But the majority still use
a dedicated PS and multicore cable.

I guess you never saw any of the battery powered tube hearing aids?
They used less power than a mic preamp, due to their directly heated
filaments.
I'm no expert on valves, but perhaps a type suitable for a low fi device
like a hearing aid might be somewhat lacking in a mic? Good noise
performance is difficult to achieve with valve mics - which may not be a
consideration if used as a close vocal mic etc - but can well be for
classical stuff.

--
*There are two sides to every divorce: Yours and shit head's*

Dave Plowman dave@davenoise.co.uk London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
 
In article <3cednU7Ogr9uvHHUnZ2dnUVZ_t2dnZ2d@earthlink.com>,
Michael A. Terrell <mike.terrell@earthlink.net> wrote:

"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote:

In article <J-mdnYIQiM3DHX7UnZ2dnUVZ_vqdnZ2d@earthlink.com>,
Michael A. Terrell <mike.terrell@earthlink.net> wrote:

If you even gave it a modicum of thought you'd realise the ability to
have one connector and type of cable for virtually any microphone has
real benefits. But then thinking beyond the end of your limited
experience isn't your strong point.

Jackass. standardized connectors is a given, in any single setting.
There are places where a common XLR type connector is not suitable, due
to heat, humidity, or vibration.
Then a standard phantom powered mic won't work too well either...

I'd have said it being picked up on the actual audio output to be more
of a problem, wouldn't you? If you ever thought before typing.

Sigh. do you always spout such nonsense? Hum can come from anywhere,
not gust the output. Think about that.
None of the phantom powered mics I've got hum. That's good enough for me.



Why do you think they use HF AC to power the lamp used in film
projectors, instead of DC? Its easier to rectify & filter a power
source well above the needed audio bandwidth, than deal with
electrical noise is some locations. try your DC power in places
near a substation, where the AC magnetic field can affect video
monitors, or a high power transmitter causes ingression problems.
No circuit is a perfect balance in those situations.

Think you'd be better telling the mic makers that. I'm sure they'd be
grateful for your original thinking. After all they don't have a
single decent engineer between them...

No answer, then.
and be high enough that it couldn't interact with the audio.


Given any thought to cable design? And the lengths those often
are? Over a mile is common.

Yawn. At a mile I would look into fiber or an RF link.

You might well look into it. Of course you wouldn't be funding it...

Of course I wouldn't. Why would I pay for something the customer
would own? I worked on large projects, where zero downtime was a huge
factor. A mile of fiber is chap, compared to copper when there is no
right of way. It can be lashed to telephone or CATV trunklines, since
it is non conductive. That is a hell of a lot cheaper than digging a
mile long trench 24 to 60 inches deep, and running a mile of 2" schedule
80 electrical PVC, with service vaults every quarter mile. Most
telephone, and all broadband internet around here is fiber optic to less
than two miles for the houses. FIOS may be available in the are in a
few years, where telephone, internet and cable TV come to the house on a
single fiber optic cable. Of course that won't happen in a country
where the post office is in charge of communications. Do they still
bill you, per call on land lines?

Fiber is common as dirt in the US. They even run it to homes for
telephone service, because it is cheaper and more reliable than copper
these days. I keep forgetting that fiber and other advanced technology
isn't available in third world countries.
Ok, smart arse. Give some costs as regards fibre optic connectors that
would be as robust in service as the XLR. Needed for anything which isn't
a permanent installation. As it happens I've been recently using a fibre
optic cable between a pro HD camera and recorder and could give you some
figures...

Try running a mile of audio cable in a place with a lot of lighting
is sheer stupidity.

Is this called thread drift? Or just the effects of alcohol?

If its due to alcohol, then stop drinking. I have never been drunk,
since I don't drink. That just leaves you as the alcoholic. Typical
british BS. You try to slander anyone who won't kiss your stinking ass.
You patently have no idea about how mics are used in practice. I have, as
it's been my career for many a year. So stick to what you do know about
rather than trying to be the resident expert in *everything*. It does you
no favours.

[snip]

--
*Beware - animal lover - brakes for pussy*

Dave Plowman dave@davenoise.co.uk London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
 
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote:
You patently have no idea about how mics are used in practice. I have, as
it's been my career for many a year. So stick to what you do know about
rather than trying to be the resident expert in *everything*. It does you
no favours.

Stick your head back up your ass, with your arrogance. You aren't the
only one to ever work in a recording, or broadcast studio. As far as
costs on fiber, I'm on the other side of the world, and it wouldn't help
you. Find a local supplier and see what you need. No matter what I
post, you will find fault with it simply to be an ass.

I want no favors from you nor do I really give a damn, now that I no
longer design studios or communication systems. The only reason I was
reading this newsgroup was to help where I could, but the group had
turned into a bunch of know it all hacks. At one time it was a good
place to share information, and people wanted to help. Well, enjoy the
shit hole you've turned it into.

--
You can't have a sense of humor, if you have no sense!
 
Michael A. Terrell wrote:
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote:
In article <49E3C34C.CF13C6C@hotmail.com>,
Eeyore <rabbitsfriendsandrelations@hotmail.com> wrote:
That wasn't possible with early phantom mics, using tube preamps.
I'm not aware of any tube based condensor mics that used phantom power
as we talk of it now. They usually had dedicated multipole connectors
rather than the now ubiquitous 3 pin XLR.
Rather obvious when you think of the technology then - and the restricted
current available with phantom power.

There's been quite a revival in valve mics and I've a feeling there may be
at least one which runs off phantom. But the majority still use a
dedicated PS and multicore cable.


I guess you never saw any of the battery powered tube hearing aids?
They used less power than a mic preamp, due to their directly heated
filaments.
I actually pulled apart a tube hearing aid as a kid. The whole hearing
aid was around the size of a packet of cigarettes, & the tubes were
maybe half the size of a cigarette. I have no idea whether or not they
did anything unusual to heat the filaments.


--
W
. | ,. w , "Some people are alive only because
\|/ \|/ it is illegal to kill them." Perna condita delenda est
---^----^---------------------------------------------------------------
 

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