murrayatuptown
Well-known member
Hello:
I have not unplugged the overhead microphone inside my vehicle's headliner yet, to check, and I assume measuring for a bias voltage will assure me...
I want to experiment with an alternate microphone in my car due to terrible road noise...
I chose a cardioid electret lavalier mic with TA4F connector because cardioid's have served me well with camera & phone recordings of live music in noisy environments.
There will be no live music recordings in my car, just telephone conversation.
The schematic for the mic shows MIC+ and MIC- with the (-) connected to shield. I am hoping there is already bias voltage on MIC+...otherwise it is in a remote, less-than-ideal connector, maybe under one of the car seats... There is a + V elsewhere (I think in the 54-pin module connector.
The cardioid mic is compatible with Shure systems, so I have a pinout for what the mic's TA4F wiring is.
Does this sound reasonably thought out? Or am I potentially going to run into problems with an active noise-cancellation system that exists, but the performance is so bad I assumed there was only the mic properties and placement by design?
If there is no bias voltage in the mic cavity, then I guess it would not be an ECM. I suppose I could also use a CR2032 or two crammed inside the cavity, along with a DC blocking capacitor.
I made an awful lot of assumptions from one camera's service manual to connect a Linkwitz-modded ECM capsule to a point & shoot camera with only one resistor change needed (2nd guess success). My luck could run out...
Thank you
Murray
I have not unplugged the overhead microphone inside my vehicle's headliner yet, to check, and I assume measuring for a bias voltage will assure me...
I want to experiment with an alternate microphone in my car due to terrible road noise...
I chose a cardioid electret lavalier mic with TA4F connector because cardioid's have served me well with camera & phone recordings of live music in noisy environments.
There will be no live music recordings in my car, just telephone conversation.
The schematic for the mic shows MIC+ and MIC- with the (-) connected to shield. I am hoping there is already bias voltage on MIC+...otherwise it is in a remote, less-than-ideal connector, maybe under one of the car seats... There is a + V elsewhere (I think in the 54-pin module connector.
The cardioid mic is compatible with Shure systems, so I have a pinout for what the mic's TA4F wiring is.
Does this sound reasonably thought out? Or am I potentially going to run into problems with an active noise-cancellation system that exists, but the performance is so bad I assumed there was only the mic properties and placement by design?
If there is no bias voltage in the mic cavity, then I guess it would not be an ECM. I suppose I could also use a CR2032 or two crammed inside the cavity, along with a DC blocking capacitor.
I made an awful lot of assumptions from one camera's service manual to connect a Linkwitz-modded ECM capsule to a point & shoot camera with only one resistor change needed (2nd guess success). My luck could run out...
Thank you
Murray
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