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Johnny1234

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 27, 2021
Messages
167
Location
Dupont, PA
Hi all any advice is greatly appreciated.

I need to modify a box at work. The original has an amplifer driving a 2 inch 16 ohm speaker.
I need to:
1 Add a line out
2 Have a switch to alternate between speaker and line out
3 Add a volume control for the line out and speaker

Below is a little diagram of my thoughts. All ideas are greatly appreciated, but simpler is better.
Many Thanks
 

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1 Add a line out

How is the signal delivered to the amplifier in the box? Do you already have access to a line level signal coming in, or the speaker is part of something else and you cannot easily access as line level?

What is the level sent to the speaker? (presumably pretty low since it is a 2" speaker, but you will still need to know typical and max to determine how to adapt to line level).

What nominal "line level" do you want? What consumer equipment considers line level and what pro equipment considers line level is quite a bit different.
 
The box is for a college game show that we will host. Signal is derived internally, it just beeps lol. I don't have easy access to the line level input. Speaker level very low I would imagine about 1 volt. Nominal level would be for pro audio input.
 

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What are the specs for the input being fed from the beep-o-matic <g>? +4 dBu or -10 dBV line level, low Z mic level, guitar amp instrument level, etc. etc.



Sorry....couldn't resist....

Bri

LOL I love it made me smile after a tough week at work. Input will be like a Makie line input 10K ohms.
 
OK....curious how you figured that voltage spec. Oscilloscope? Regardless, seems like a step-down xfmr would be a good idea.

I'll pick this up later after I have some tacos for dinner<g>.

Bri
Thank you Brian, Yes measured on a oscilloscope. Beeps to fast to measure with rms volt meter.
 
Thank you Brian, Yes measured on a oscilloscope. Beeps to fast to measure with rms volt meter.
OK.....peak or peak to peak?

Regardless, maybe something like a xfmr "rated" for 10K:600 Ohms. Nice step down ratio to drop the signal to a reasonable level. I seriously doubt you need the beeps to slam the mixer's VU meter....lol.

Damn....their prices have gone up:

https://edcorusa.com/products/wsm-s...-matching-transformers?variant=41117605298363

What do you have in your junkbox? Like, any xfmrs intended for "70 Volt" loudspeaker distribution systems (ie the 8" speakers attached on frisbies in the ceiling tiles at Applebees)?

Bri
 
@Johnny1234 ....Just noticed in your first post that you wanted the volume control to vary BOTH the speaker and line output levels. Now I'm second guessing myself on everything! lol

Without "being there", I have a variety of "what if's?" in my poor dumb brain!

I've worked off and on at commercial radio stations over decades and many "one off" projects came up. In YOUR case, is the little internal speaker in Beep-o-matic ONLY used when not on the air (ie, audition in the control room)? Or, is it also needed to hear beeps for anyone sitting in the control room who don't have headphones AND also feed into the mixer?

Damn....I'm over thinking this! <g>

Bri
 
ARRRGH! I looked at the picture you posted...and see a switch for "speaker"/"XLR" and a level pot of some sort, and a male XLR. ???????????????

In post #4 you said "Speaker level very low I would imagine about 1 volt."

Post #5 you said 17V peak into the speaker. Converting to RMS (12V) that is 9 Watts into 16 Ohms which should send a 2" speaker cone ejecting from the box as confetti.

Now exactly what are we doing here? I am just a old, cranky tech! ;-) But, I am 10000% certain an output transformer should be used for galvanic isolation in this science fair project <g>....and I say that with a warm heart.

I worked part time at a struggling FM station when I was a Sr. in High school (1972) and had to figure out how to interface one of these beep-boxes (I built it from a magazine article and mail order kit) into the KWHP production room system.

https://www.ebay.com/itm/156469073284

Bri
 

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