k brown
Well-known member
Being strictly a location engineer with no studio experience, why aren't alll studios wired with XLRs for mic in, and TRS for line in?
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Being strictly a location engineer with no sudio experience, why aren't alll studios wired with XLRs for mic in, and TRS for line in?
Because a lot of pro outboard is line level and uses XLRs. You idea will certainly work but you would need a lot of XLR to TRS adaptors and sooner or later someone is going to plug the XLR end of one into an input with phantom power on it.Being strictly a location engineer with no studio experience, why aren't alll studios wired with XLRs for mic in, and TRS for line in?
Even if the outputs are capacitor coupled, one would need to be sure that the caps are rated for 63v, which isn't gauranteed on much of the gear I have looked at over the years....OP, are you sure your synth does not have capacitor coupled outputs?
I see no reason to DC couple a low level output, unless you want 0.001Hz bass response.
Adding output coupling caps shouldn't be too hard, cut a wire or a trace put in a leaded cap or an SMT cap, if some bonehead forgot to include it.
Mic inputs are special, they are not "line" level.
OP, are you sure your synth does not have capacitor coupled outputs?
I see no reason to DC couple a low level output, unless you want 0.001Hz bass response.
Adding output coupling caps shouldn't be too hard, cut a wire or a trace put in a leaded cap or an SMT cap, if some bonehead forgot to include it.
Mic inputs are special, they are not "line" level.
Even if the oututs are capacitor coupled, one would need to be sure that the caps are rated for 63v, which isn't gauranteed on much of the gear I have looked at over the years....
This is exactly how I’ve always done it as well.In a few studio builds, I specified that the mic lines from the wall panels in the tracking space(s) terminate in a panel in the control room which had male XLRs for the incoming signals. The same panel also had female XLRs for connection to the mic preamp inputs. Short male-female XLR cables did the patching.
The reasoning was that the bantam patchbays used for the line level patching weren't really reliable for the mic levels. For instruments. we used DI's.
Bri
I agree! Unfortunately, I have also come across many cases where there was phantom power at the input of the line. Otherwise, it is worth turning it off, even for dynamic microphones, because it can produce significant dielectric noise in the cables (when they are moved or stepped on). (I used to be a sound engineer for rock bands.)I just checked the M1516 schematic. It has a pair of switchable mic inputs which are fed phantom power. There is a +4dBu input position on the mic gain switch which bypasses the mic pre but for some unknown reason it does not disable the phantom power. Even in the +4 position, the input impedance is only 1K3 which could be problematic for some synth output. I think you definitely need some form of protection such as that proposed by Bill.
Cheers
Ian
There is a problem with this design. The pair of 47K resistors provide a return path from the two electrolytics back to the 0V of the phantom supply. This means that when the phantom is switched on, since the voltage across the capacitors cannot change instantaneously, the two 47K resistors have 48V phantom across them until they charge up the capacitors. The time constant of 47K and 100uF is 4.7 seconds. In theory, this in itself is not sufficient to do any damage as long as the two voltages remain the same because any difference between them will result in a current flowing in the microphone. This means you really need to plug the blocker into the preamp with phantom on and then plug the mic into the blocker. Only in this way will the caps have had time to charge up. Bottom line is this may not work when re-plugging.
At least one phantom blocker manufacturer is aware of this limitation:
https://www.tritonaudio.com/product/phantom-blocker/
but good old Hugh Robjohns seems to have missed it:
https://www.soundonsound.com/sound-advice/q-there-easy-way-block-phantom-power-cable
Cheers
Ian
Bipolar caps are definitely a good idea. Bottom line is that no matter what you do, any change in the phantom power dc level will be transmitted through the capacitors. The only other thing I can think of to mitigate this is to deliberately load the 48V with say a 1K resistor to pin 1 on each of the hot and cold legs. This would at least limit any sudden changes to about 6 volts.Use a bipolar capacitor or bipolar configuration of capacitors such that DC polarity is not an issue. Or 'active' solution with series capacitors having their junction tied to a fixed bias voltage that is not derived from P48.
Rupert Neve, for one, on the very best-sounding consoles he ever designedWhat nitwit outfit sold pramps where phantom was always on?
Why on earth would he have done that? To what possible advantage?Rupert Neve, for one, on the very best-sounding consoles he ever designed
Bipolar caps are definitely a good idea. Bottom line is that no matter what you do, any change in the phantom power dc level will be transmitted through the capacitors. The only other thing I can think of to mitigate this is to deliberately load the 48V with say a 1K resistor to pin 1 on each of the hot and cold legs. This would at least limit any sudden changes to about 6 volts.
Cheers
Ian
I can’t speak to motive; only to the factsWhy on earth would he have done that? To what possible advantage?
A really rough way for people to find out they had a ribbon mic with faulty wiring! But hot-plugging also NOT recommended for most condenser mics either (?!).
Why on earth would he have done that? To what possible advantage?
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