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microphone impedance matching circuit?
I've just bought a nominal 150 Ohm Z Shure dynamic mic & I want to use
it with my FT-897, which expects a minimum 200 Ohm Z. Is there a good impedance matching circuit out there that I could build? Do I need to? Thanks. |
microphone impedance matching circuit?
marc wrote:
I've just bought a nominal 150 Ohm Z Shure dynamic mic & I want to use it with my FT-897, which expects a minimum 200 Ohm Z. Is there a good impedance matching circuit out there that I could build? Do I need to? Thanks. NOPE! Nope! |
microphone impedance matching circuit?
Simple enough. Thanks
On Dec 26, 2:54 pm, Dave wrote: marc wrote: I've just bought a nominal 150 Ohm Z Shure dynamic mic & I want to use it with my FT-897, which expects a minimum 200 Ohm Z. Is there a good impedance matching circuit out there that I could build? Do I need to? Thanks.NOPE! Nope! |
microphone impedance matching circuit?
As long as the source impedance of your microphone is lower than the load
impedance of your 897's mic input, you are fine. The impedance is close enough anyway. Pete "marc" wrote in message ups.com... Simple enough. Thanks On Dec 26, 2:54 pm, Dave wrote: marc wrote: I've just bought a nominal 150 Ohm Z Shure dynamic mic & I want to use it with my FT-897, which expects a minimum 200 Ohm Z. Is there a good impedance matching circuit out there that I could build? Do I need to? Thanks.NOPE! Nope! |
microphone impedance matching circuit?
In article , "Pete KE9OA" wrote:
As long as the source impedance of your microphone is lower than the load impedance of your 897's mic input, you are fine. The impedance is close enough anyway. Its more about output level, relating to standard levels at various Z's. A 100 ohm mic will have less output than a 1k. I really can't think of any reason Z would matter, except a low Z mic would tend to have less RF pickup, but maybe not. greg "marc" wrote in message oups.com... Simple enough. Thanks On Dec 26, 2:54 pm, Dave wrote: marc wrote: I've just bought a nominal 150 Ohm Z Shure dynamic mic & I want to use it with my FT-897, which expects a minimum 200 Ohm Z. Is there a good impedance matching circuit out there that I could build? Do I need to? Thanks.NOPE! Nope! |
microphone impedance matching circuit?
Greg wrote:
Pete KE9OA wrote: As long as the source impedance of your microphone is lower than the load impedance of your 897's mic input, you are fine. The impedance is close enough anyway. Its more about output level, relating to standard levels at various Z's. A 100 ohm mic will have less output than a 1k. I really can't think of any reason Z would matter, except a low Z mic would tend to have less RF pickup, but maybe not. greg Terminating a signal source in an impedance that is lower than for what the source was designed, will reduce the low frequency response. The worse the mismatch, the worse the LF rolloff. I learned that in my broadcast days... a turntable preamp wanted to see = 10K ohms but the mixing console's input Z was 600 ohms. The result was a very "tinny" sound that *nowhere near* met our annual audio Proof of Performance test. OTOH, loading a 100 ohm source w/ 1K ohm will result only in a less-than-maximal signal level. That's ok as long as the preamp can make up the signal level w/o adding undue noise. 73, Bryan WA7PRC |
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