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#1
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Hi,
Silly question… I've been experimenting with a radio station on the bicycle for HF operation and one problem I've been facing is that of RF feedback getting into the microphone. I've tried a few things to try and eliminate the RF. The set is a Yaesu FT-857D, and I use runs of CAT5 cabling to hook the head unit and my headset up to the radio which is mounted in a motorcycle topbox behind me. I've ensured that the microphone + and - signals are on their own dedicated pair in the CAT5, as are the +5V and GND signals. The microphone biasing is done near the head unit of the radio, so maybe 1.5m away from the radio, and a short lead then plugs into the (helmet-embedded) headset. My biasing circuit looks like this: (please excuse the ASCII art) .-----. .---------------~~----. +5v ---o------------o----| 1k |---o ..100nF | | | '-----' '---||--o---o Mic + +| . ----- ----- '' --- ( )| Electret .-'-. 100uF ----- 100nF ,. --- 100nF -| ' Insert | | .-----. .---||--o---o Mic - | (headset) 0v----o------------o----| 1k |---o ''100nF | '-----' '---------------~~----' The capacitors are all (with the exception of the 100uF electrolytic) small monolithic capacitors: http://www.jaycar.com.au/productView.asp?ID=RC5490 My intent is that the capacitors across the 5V rail should suppress the RF on the 5V rail, and the capacitor across the output of the bias circuit should suppress any common-mode RF on the balanced feed to the radio. I think there's one across the microphone in the headset too. Originally I contemplated a phantom-power arrangement, but I'd need to sit down and design the bias circuit as most of my stuff is in the 3-5V range, not the 12-48V range that phantom-power normally assumes. I note I do not get the RF feedback if I use the stock Yaesu handmic that came with the set, which is a 600ohm dynamic microphone. Currently I use an electret insert in the headset, one out of the junk box often salvaged from old mobile phone "headsets" (those annoying earphone things with an inline microphone). The lack of problems with the Yaesu handmic got me thinking: I have amassed a large quantity of earphone speakers from those mobile phone headsets (I hate the bloody things: can't stand putting anything *in* my ears). These are speakers with dimensions not too dissimilar to small dynamic elements with an impedance of 32ohms. Question is, how well would these work as microphones? Has anyone tried this and can share any insights? |
#2
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#3
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On Sun, 27 Jul 2014, Stuart Longland wrote:
Hi, Silly question? I've been experimenting with a radio station on the bicycle for HF operation and one problem I've been facing is that of RF feedback getting into the microphone. I've tried a few things to try and eliminate the RF. The set is a Yaesu FT-857D, and I use runs of CAT5 cabling to hook the head unit and my headset up to the radio which is mounted in a motorcycle topbox behind me. I've ensured that the microphone + and - signals are on their own dedicated pair in the CAT5, as are the +5V and GND signals. The microphone biasing is done near the head unit of the radio, so maybe 1.5m away from the radio, and a short lead then plugs into the (helmet-embedded) headset. My biasing circuit looks like this: (please excuse the ASCII art) .-----. .---------------~~----. +5v ---o------------o----| 1k |---o ..100nF | | | '-----' '---||--o---o Mic + +| . ----- ----- '' --- ( )| Electret .-'-. 100uF ----- 100nF ,. --- 100nF -| ' Insert | | .-----. .---||--o---o Mic - | (headset) 0v----o------------o----| 1k |---o ''100nF | '-----' '---------------~~----' The capacitors are all (with the exception of the 100uF electrolytic) small monolithic capacitors: http://www.jaycar.com.au/productView.asp?ID=RC5490 My intent is that the capacitors across the 5V rail should suppress the RF on the 5V rail, and the capacitor across the output of the bias circuit should suppress any common-mode RF on the balanced feed to the radio. I think there's one across the microphone in the headset too. Originally I contemplated a phantom-power arrangement, but I'd need to sit down and design the bias circuit as most of my stuff is in the 3-5V range, not the 12-48V range that phantom-power normally assumes. I note I do not get the RF feedback if I use the stock Yaesu handmic that came with the set, which is a 600ohm dynamic microphone. Currently I use an electret insert in the headset, one out of the junk box often salvaged from old mobile phone "headsets" (those annoying earphone things with an inline microphone). The lack of problems with the Yaesu handmic got me thinking: I have amassed a large quantity of earphone speakers from those mobile phone headsets (I hate the bloody things: can't stand putting anything *in* my ears). These are speakers with dimensions not too dissimilar to small dynamic elements with an impedance of 32ohms. Question is, how well would these work as microphones? Has anyone tried this and can share any insights? IN the old days, endless cheap 100mW walkie talkies would use the speaker for the microphone on transmit. For that matter, endless intercom systems used the same speaker as a speaker and as a microphone. Endless articles in the magazines showed taking a speaker of some sort and using it as a microphone. Of course, those were speakers, most seemed at least 2". An earphone may not offer the same level of sound collection that a speaker with a larger cone allows, you may have to play with things. I remember taking cheap dynamic earphones and taking the bit that went in your ear off, and using that as a contact microphone for various things. The other issue is the output may not be so great, mostly because the speaker is arranged for sound reproduction, not sound pickup. It may need a preamp, depending on the actual output voltage. It may also need impedance matching, which would also help boost the output, use an output transformer in reverse so the speaker winding is fed from the speaker, and the now secondary winding will have more voltage to feed the higher input impedance of the rig. Michael |
#4
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On 7/27/2014 6:21 AM, Stuart Longland wrote:
Hi, Silly question… I've been experimenting with a radio station on the bicycle for HF operation and one problem I've been facing is that of RF feedback getting into the microphone. I've tried a few things to try and eliminate the RF. The set is a Yaesu FT-857D, and I use runs of CAT5 cabling to hook the head unit and my headset up to the radio which is mounted in a motorcycle topbox behind me. I've ensured that the microphone + and - signals are on their own dedicated pair in the CAT5, as are the +5V and GND signals. The microphone biasing is done near the head unit of the radio, so maybe 1.5m away from the radio, and a short lead then plugs into the (helmet-embedded) headset. My biasing circuit looks like this: (please excuse the ASCII art) .-----. .---------------~~----. +5v ---o------------o----| 1k |---o ..100nF | | | '-----' '---||--o---o Mic + +| . ----- ----- '' --- ( )| Electret .-'-. 100uF ----- 100nF ,. --- 100nF -| ' Insert | | .-----. .---||--o---o Mic - | (headset) 0v----o------------o----| 1k |---o ''100nF | '-----' '---------------~~----' The capacitors are all (with the exception of the 100uF electrolytic) small monolithic capacitors: http://www.jaycar.com.au/productView.asp?ID=RC5490 My intent is that the capacitors across the 5V rail should suppress the RF on the 5V rail, and the capacitor across the output of the bias circuit should suppress any common-mode RF on the balanced feed to the radio. I think there's one across the microphone in the headset too. Originally I contemplated a phantom-power arrangement, but I'd need to sit down and design the bias circuit as most of my stuff is in the 3-5V range, not the 12-48V range that phantom-power normally assumes. I note I do not get the RF feedback if I use the stock Yaesu handmic that came with the set, which is a 600ohm dynamic microphone. Currently I use an electret insert in the headset, one out of the junk box often salvaged from old mobile phone "headsets" (those annoying earphone things with an inline microphone). The lack of problems with the Yaesu handmic got me thinking: I have amassed a large quantity of earphone speakers from those mobile phone headsets (I hate the bloody things: can't stand putting anything *in* my ears). These are speakers with dimensions not too dissimilar to small dynamic elements with an impedance of 32ohms. Question is, how well would these work as microphones? Has anyone tried this and can share any insights? Don't forget that you may need to match the acoustic aspects of the earpiece to that of a mic meaning you will need at minimum to open up the opening and preferably add some sort of cone or horn. Poor acoustic coupling will diminish the signal level just as easily as poor electrical coupling. -- Rick |
#5
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Michael Black wrote in
news:alpine.LNX.2.02.1407271413320.23911@darkstar. example.org: An earphone may not offer the same level of sound collection that a speaker with a larger cone allows, you may have to play with things. I remember taking cheap dynamic earphones and taking the bit that went in your ear off, and using that as a contact microphone for various things. Could be so. When I asswered I overlooked the detail of headphone type. The little bud types might not be so good, but the small on-ear types that came out when cheap Walkmans werre new, are a very good candidate, because the construction of those is almost identical with that of many cheap dynamic mics, and the sound fidelity is also very good with a diaphram about 0.75'' to 1'' wide. Mylar too, so no degrading with humidity. I haven't tried to work out the implications of matching impedance for gain, but these days it is likely easier not to do it, just use a high resistance input with low noise and high gain. Cheap op-amps that will do it are easily had. Dynamic mics with transformer matching might work but even if immune to RF pickup they will catch magnetic fields as if intended to do so! I also wonder if fully balanced feed is needed in either case, dynamic or electret. If one wire is firmly grounded, and is part of a twisted pair with the wire that carries the DC feed and the AC signal out, then it ought to cancel out any incoming HF anyway. It's possible that trying to make it fully balanced might make it more vulnerable, not less, because it has no firm ground on either pole. The main thing is to get the gain up as close to the electret as possible, and that will want very small parts. Transistor rather than transformer.. |
#6
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Lostgallifreyan wrote in
: I also wonder if fully balanced feed is needed in either case, dynamic or electret. If one wire is firmly grounded, and is part of a twisted pair with the wire that carries the DC feed and the AC signal out, then it ought to cancel out any incoming HF anyway. It's possible that trying to make it fully balanced might make it more vulnerable, not less, because it has no firm ground on either pole. The main thing is to get the gain up as close to the electret as possible, and that will want very small parts. Transistor rather than transformer.. Bit more thought on that... If the circit to be fed by this has two grounds, one for frame, the other for local AF input signals, then instead of CAT5 pairs, use a twisted pair cheap 3mm thick cable with a screen. Screen to frame ground, twisted pair for AF line and signal ground. That should shunt HF pickup to ground in the equipment where it is likely already done, and allow at least a metre of signal line to work well. |
#7
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On 28/07/14 04:18, Michael Black wrote:
IN the old days, endless cheap 100mW walkie talkies would use the speaker for the microphone on transmit. For that matter, endless intercom systems used the same speaker as a speaker and as a microphone. I do remember those, in fact I've got one gutted somewhere. Had a crystal for 27.145MHz. I once tried wiring up an electret element, not knowing there was a difference, and was disappointed when it didn't work. An earphone may not offer the same level of sound collection that a speaker with a larger cone allows, you may have to play with things. I remember taking cheap dynamic earphones and taking the bit that went in your ear off, and using that as a contact microphone for various things. In the interest of science, I gave it a shot just then. With a 100nF capacitor in series to block the DC, I wired it to a DIN5 plug (all my radios have been set up with adaptors to DIN5 headset jacks) and tried it. It did work, but without any amplification or impedance matching, the modulation is well down. I might try winding a small transformer and see what that does. |
#8
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Stuart Longland wrote:
On 28/07/14 04:18, Michael Black wrote: IN the old days, endless cheap 100mW walkie talkies would use the speaker for the microphone on transmit. For that matter, endless intercom systems used the same speaker as a speaker and as a microphone. I do remember those, in fact I've got one gutted somewhere. Had a crystal for 27.145MHz. I once tried wiring up an electret element, not knowing there was a difference, and was disappointed when it didn't work. An earphone may not offer the same level of sound collection that a speaker with a larger cone allows, you may have to play with things. I remember taking cheap dynamic earphones and taking the bit that went in your ear off, and using that as a contact microphone for various things. In the interest of science, I gave it a shot just then. With a 100nF capacitor in series to block the DC, I wired it to a DIN5 plug (all my radios have been set up with adaptors to DIN5 headset jacks) and tried it. It did work, but without any amplification or impedance matching, the modulation is well down. I might try winding a small transformer and see what that does. In the days when speakers were used as microphones in walkie talkies and intercoms, it also was quite popular to have transformers between the final stage transistors and the speaker. The circuits of such devices were often very cleverly designed, re-using many components between receive and transmit (using a multipole switch). It is quite likely that the output transformer was used as a step-up transformer while the speaker was used as microphone. |
#9
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On Sun, 3 Aug 2014, Stuart Longland wrote:
On 28/07/14 04:18, Michael Black wrote: IN the old days, endless cheap 100mW walkie talkies would use the speaker for the microphone on transmit. For that matter, endless intercom systems used the same speaker as a speaker and as a microphone. I do remember those, in fact I've got one gutted somewhere. Had a crystal for 27.145MHz. I once tried wiring up an electret element, not knowing there was a difference, and was disappointed when it didn't work. An earphone may not offer the same level of sound collection that a speaker with a larger cone allows, you may have to play with things. I remember taking cheap dynamic earphones and taking the bit that went in your ear off, and using that as a contact microphone for various things. In the interest of science, I gave it a shot just then. With a 100nF capacitor in series to block the DC, I wired it to a DIN5 plug (all my radios have been set up with adaptors to DIN5 headset jacks) and tried it. It did work, but without any amplification or impedance matching, the modulation is well down. I might try winding a small transformer and see what that does. I recall a couple of articles where people moved those cheap walkie talkies to 10 or 6metres, and they both mentioned adding an audio transformer to improve the audio on transmit. Michael |
#10
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On Sat, 2 Aug 2014, Rob wrote:
Stuart Longland wrote: On 28/07/14 04:18, Michael Black wrote: IN the old days, endless cheap 100mW walkie talkies would use the speaker for the microphone on transmit. For that matter, endless intercom systems used the same speaker as a speaker and as a microphone. I do remember those, in fact I've got one gutted somewhere. Had a crystal for 27.145MHz. I once tried wiring up an electret element, not knowing there was a difference, and was disappointed when it didn't work. An earphone may not offer the same level of sound collection that a speaker with a larger cone allows, you may have to play with things. I remember taking cheap dynamic earphones and taking the bit that went in your ear off, and using that as a contact microphone for various things. In the interest of science, I gave it a shot just then. With a 100nF capacitor in series to block the DC, I wired it to a DIN5 plug (all my radios have been set up with adaptors to DIN5 headset jacks) and tried it. It did work, but without any amplification or impedance matching, the modulation is well down. I might try winding a small transformer and see what that does. In the days when speakers were used as microphones in walkie talkies and intercoms, it also was quite popular to have transformers between the final stage transistors and the speaker. The circuits of such devices were often very cleverly designed, re-using many components between receive and transmit (using a multipole switch). They were really complicated switches, for the sake of a few transistors. It is quite likely that the output transformer was used as a step-up transformer while the speaker was used as microphone. That's what I would have thought, but I recall articles about modifying those cheap walkie talkies and they added transformers to step up the output from the speaker on transmit. You're right, in that era, the audio amplifiers were using an output transformer. But it wasn't just to match impedance, it was part of the amplifier, and thus needed on transmit too. Michael |
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