Thanks! Yeah i finally found that and ultimately figured out that it doesn’t have the transformer topology I’m working with, so I’m figuring to focus on ones that are closest and work from there...A Neve tube schematic. Not sure which one.
Cheers
Ian
This mixer looks to me to be like an old-style -- radio broadcast -- mixer. Maybe for "Radio Caroline"??? HA!!!.....A Neve tube schematic. Not sure which one.
Cheers
Ian
Strangely enough, virtually all the UK pirate radio ships used American AM broadcast consoles simply because at that time there was no local radio at all in the UK, just the three national BBC stations.This mixer looks to me to be like an old-style -- radio broadcast -- mixer. Maybe for "Radio Caroline"??? HA!!!.....
Alrighty, I’ll keep it simple (unbalanced).One thing to bear in mind is that balanced busing complicates the pan control. A regular unbalanced pan needs a dual gang pot. Strictly speaking, a balanced pan needs a 4 gang. There is little if any benefit in balanced busing in a small mixer.
Cheers
Ian
Thank you for this help!Both of your schematics are a bit of a compromise but that is normal with all engineering.
A bridged T fader is meant to be driven by a 600 ohm source and loaded by one so strictly speaking the transformer secondary should include a series build out resistor to achieve this. One reason this sort of technique was later abandoned is that,with a 600 ohm source and an identical load, you lose 6dB of level in the pursuit of constant impedance. Your scheme avoids this and you end up with a variable load. A good transformer should not have a problem with this. You can probably dispense with the 1K slug.
The variable load of the pan pot in the regular pot version means the pot law changes depending on the pan setting. It tends to mean you get more attenuation than you expect as you move down from fully up. In practice it is not really a problem because most people set the level by ear. Just something to be aware of. To minimise this you can increase the ratio of the fader to pan pot. At the moment you are at 2:1 (10K:5K). I tend to use 5:1 with a 10K fader and 50K pan pots and 47K bus feed resistors.. You could achieve the same or better simply by lowering the value of the fader pot.
I think you are nearly there.
Cheers
Ian
If you go that route then the simplest line input would be a 10K:10K transformer straight into the level pot. Pretty much what I do for AUX returns.I’m considering putting a line level input transformer prior to the passive circuits. This would be mostly for the benefit of interfacing, since then I’d have a balanced I/O point for external equipment. Just a nicety really.
Obviously a 600:600 would be a neutral way of going about it, and I suppose retain all relationships as they currently are. But is there anything I can benefit from with a higher secondary?
For what it’s worth, I’m leaning towards the potentiometer version, but bumping all passive circuit values 5X. So a 25K pot, 50k panning, 10k slugs, and 50k summing. I would also have a 1K slug loading the output transformer from preamp. I did some rough math and pretty much all conditions hover around a total of 700-900 ohms on the output of preamp.
Digging back through the one Putnam article, the mention of pan pots that can be patched to any channel says they are "5K bridging input" in an otherwise 500/600 system.
Even though they went to the trouble of having parallel LCR main/echo busses, they did not use off the shelf 600/600 LCR pan pots on all channels (or even some), which were available from Langevin, Altec, and Daven. I haven't seen a console with one of those LR or LCR 600 ohm pan pots so far, outside of one or two on a custom console build. Again, speaks to perceived need versus cost.
Looking at the 610 listing in the 1967 catalog, there's mention of the "application and installation notes" - I don't think I've seen a copy of that surface.
I think (not sure) that has been replaced by the tech docs section.In the other thread here about the Putnam console (which I actually just posted to), there is talk of a Gmail account for Groupdiy that has some documentation about the Putnam stuff. Does that account still exist? There was a password listed there but I tried and it doesn’t work.
https://groupdiy.com/threads/original-ua-console-100d-preamp-eq-101d-program-amp.42772/page-4
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