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[email protected] October 8th 07 07:07 PM

Help identify a desk-type microphone?
 
While sorting through my "collection" of junque microphones,
I found a desk-type mic with
* a fairly thick and heavy base with
* a four-wire cable,
* an RCA logo on the front, below and to the left of
* a plastic horizontal TRANSMIT bar, and
* a sticker on the bottom which says (and sorta looks like):

SHURE BROTHERS INC.
Controlled magnetic microphone
Model #MI-559156-1
Made in Evanston, ILL., U.S.A.
U.S. Patent D-198,850

In addition to the expected switch, the base also hides a one-transistor
something (presumably an amplifier). By treating the "amplifier" as a
three-terminal device, the wiring was simple enough to trace:
* two wires for PTT and
* two for audio
and it did work with my HF radio, although the mike did NOT seem very
sensitive.

Does anyone have any information about this mike and/or the radio it
might have originally accompanied? Since there is no provision for
an internal battery, I wonder if its radio supplied a voltage on one
of the audio wires?

--W0PBV.
--
--Myron A. Calhoun.
Five boxes preserve our freedoms: soap, ballot, witness, jury, and cartridge
NRA Life Member & Certified Instructor for Rifle, Pistol, & Home Firearm Safety
Also Certified Instructor for the Kansas Concealed-Carry Handgun (CCH) license

The Shadow[_2_] October 8th 07 08:08 PM

Help identify a desk-type microphone?
 

wrote in message ...
While sorting through my "collection" of junque microphones,
I found a desk-type mic with
* a fairly thick and heavy base with
* a four-wire cable,
* an RCA logo on the front, below and to the left of
* a plastic horizontal TRANSMIT bar, and
* a sticker on the bottom which says (and sorta looks like):

SHURE BROTHERS INC.
Controlled magnetic microphone
Model #MI-559156-1
Made in Evanston, ILL., U.S.A.
U.S. Patent D-198,850

In addition to the expected switch, the base also hides a one-transistor
something (presumably an amplifier). By treating the "amplifier" as a
three-terminal device, the wiring was simple enough to trace:
* two wires for PTT and
* two for audio
and it did work with my HF radio, although the mike did NOT seem very
sensitive.

Does anyone have any information about this mike and/or the radio it
might have originally accompanied? Since there is no provision for
an internal battery, I wonder if its radio supplied a voltage on one
of the audio wires?

--W0PBV.
--
--Myron A. Calhoun.



Try browsing thru K9TOA collection of Ham Mics URL:
http://k9toa.net/index.html

The Shadow Knows

Fred McKenzie October 9th 07 12:38 AM

Help identify a desk-type microphone?
 
In article , wrote:

While sorting through my "collection" of junque microphones,
I found a desk-type mic with
* a fairly thick and heavy base with
* a four-wire cable,
* an RCA logo on the front, below and to the left of
* a plastic horizontal TRANSMIT bar, and
* a sticker on the bottom which says (and sorta looks like):

SHURE BROTHERS INC.
Controlled magnetic microphone
Model #MI-559156-1
Made in Evanston, ILL., U.S.A.
U.S. Patent D-198,850

In addition to the expected switch, the base also hides a one-transistor
something (presumably an amplifier).


W0PBV-

RCA used to make VHF/UHF NBFM two-way radio systems. I would guess that
this microphone was used for dispatching with an older model base
station.

You might check the Shure web site and see if they have any information
on the model number. However, it may be a proprietary number for RCA.

The Shure Controlled Magnetic or Controlled Reluctance microphone
elements came in both high and low impedances. You might do a simple 1
KHz impedance test on the element to determine which yours is. It could
most likely be used without the transistor amplifier if it matched a
radio's requirements. For example, the low impedance elements are about
200 Ohms, and work OK with Kenwood radios such as the TS-450.

The transistor amplifier is most likely to use a relatively low-output
microphone element with a radio originally designed for use with a
high-output carbon microphone. You didn't mention what HF radio you
used it with, but some recent Icom transceivers use a similar
arrangement with an amplified electret element. The low sensitivity you
experienced may be due to the old amplifier requiring a higher bias
level than the modern transceiver can provide.

Fred
K4DII

gb[_2_] October 9th 07 01:05 AM

Help identify a desk-type microphone?
 
wrote in message ...
While sorting through my "collection" of junque microphones,
I found a desk-type mic with
* a fairly thick and heavy base with
* a four-wire cable,
* an RCA logo on the front, below and to the left of
* a plastic horizontal TRANSMIT bar, and
* a sticker on the bottom which says (and sorta looks like):

SHURE BROTHERS INC.
Controlled magnetic microphone
Model #MI-559156-1
Made in Evanston, ILL., U.S.A.
U.S. Patent D-198,850

--W0PBV.


This sounds like an RCA Land Mobile microphone made by Shure

Shure - User Guides and Spec Sheets Discontinued Microphones
http://www.shure.com/ProAudio/Downlo...pecs/index.htm
http://www.shure.com/ProAudio/Downlo...c_mics_content




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