Awesome, that's all I needed ! Thanks !See attachment.
Awesome, that's all I needed ! Thanks !See attachment.
Wow, sure... keep the change, then.Just my 2-cents worth!!! (0.016818742 Euros)
Hi Doug, Do you mean leave them out entirely? I thought they were for power supply decoupling & filtering. -Mikeyou can surely skip the dual can caps, I've never used one with these.
Of course not, just that one seldom needs to retrofit exact mechanical designs, especially on little naked PCB's like this. I have almost never bought a new multi-section cap for 5x - 10x the money, it's rarely required.Hi Doug, Do you mean leave them out entirely? I thought they were for power supply decoupling & filtering. -Mike
You may want to try that before committing to a complicated wiring.I realized it may be interesting to be able to switch between 50 and 150 ohms primary,...
Remember that 50-ohm mics have never been meant to be loaded with ohms.I don't have much mics with a 50 ohms impedance... but maybe it's still interesting tone wise.
thanks Abbey, I missed your answer for some reason...You may want to try that before committing to a complicated wiring.
In my experience loading any source with too low an impedance never results in anything good.
Remember that 50-ohm mics have never been meant to be loaded with ohms.
A 10dB pad is a pig. It has either too low input impedance or too high output impedance.I think the best is 0 / 10 / 20dB input pad, and 0 / 6dB output pad. I'll start with this !
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