<<<mike input is high impedance (about 10K) unbalanced -- which is the usual amateur practice (strangely).>>> this is amazing. It is absolutely not the industry standard now. with the apparent except
10K is NOT HIGH impedance. Its moderate impedance at the best. 1 MEG is HIGH impedance. Some vintage Kenwoods take 50K as "high" impedance. So long as the NOISE of the audio stages and the gain of th
Hey fellows. Did that change with it's brother the Jupiter? Just asking as curious. I don't have a mic for my Jupiter or do I. Can't remember. (grin) I guess it works on SSB. It does digital ok. I be
My problem is (almost) solved. Rather than using the "moderately high" 10K-50K mike input on the Pegasus from my studio audio chain, I simply hooked it up through the Accessory jack pins 1 (+ audo) a
Hmm, last I looked every ham radio manual for any rig tells you the type of mike input it has. Of course, all too many hams and other techies don't read the manuals. You would be amazed at what you c
my Corsair is Hi-Z, but my Paragon and Scout are low-Z. Bob WB2VUF _______________________________________________ TenTec mailing list TenTec@contesting.com http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listin
Author: Robert & Linda McGraw K4TAX <RMcGraw@Blomand.Net>
Date: Wed, 22 Mar 2006 10:33:17 -0600
My Paragon manual lists the mike input Z as "200 - 50K ohms" at a signal level of 5mV or -62dB. This is not high Z folks. That says any low Z mike will work just fine into this input. While a true hi
Taking a very simple, experimental approach first, I fed the output of my audio chain (Neumann BCM-705 mike & Ashly DPX-200 pre-amp/parametric EQ/compressor/limiter) directly into the Accessory audio
Bob is quite correct about the amplified D 104 will work with modern mike inputs. You can also create your own impedance converter with one semiconductor active element, or use a mike transformer if