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#1
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I have the SONY RH1 minidisc recorder, and recently got binaural
microphones from Sound Professionals ( MT350 ). When I run the recorder on mains power, I get a real buzz on the recording. SP tells me that I should record on battery power only, and this does indeed solve the problem, but I really want to be able to use ac whenever possible. The SONY 907 mic works fine with no buzz, even on AC power. (The SP mics get their power through the recorder, the SONY has a battery.) Any suggestions on what to do next? Get an ac line filter? If so, where from? Get new mics? If so, any suggestions? I do want to upgrade from the 907, and am thinking of spending up to about $150. Thanks for any advice - I'm technically not very savvy, so please spell it out! Cheers. |
#2
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wrote ...
I have the SONY RH1 minidisc recorder, and recently got binaural microphones from Sound Professionals ( MT350 ). When I run the recorder on mains power, I get a real buzz on the recording. SP tells me that I should record on battery power only, and this does indeed solve the problem, but I really want to be able to use ac whenever possible. The SONY 907 mic works fine with no buzz, even on AC power. (The SP mics get their power through the recorder, the SONY has a battery.) Any suggestions on what to do next? Get an ac line filter? If so, where from? Get new mics? If so, any suggestions? I do want to upgrade from the 907, and am thinking of spending up to about $150. Thanks for any advice - I'm technically not very savvy, so please spell it out! I would return as defective any microphones that worked like that. Buy microphones from someone who doesn't give you such a lame excuse. Assuming there isn't something wrong with the "plug-in power" on your recorder. Can you go to a retailer somewhere, or borrow a microphone from a friend that runs on "plug-in-power' to confirm that the problem isn't your minidisc recorder? |
#3
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#4
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#5
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"Laurence Payne" wrote ...
It seems that the plug-in power on your Sony is noisy, when the AC adaptor is connected. You can blame this on the power adapter, the recorder or the microphone. Maybe even on your mains power. You may be able to solve it by building a simple battery power supply box to go between mic and recorder. This would be, I think, cheap and simple enough to be the thing you try first. Can someone point to a suitable circuit? The circuit is trivial, but should not be necessary. Something is broken here and should be repaired or replaced. |
#6
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On Sat, 13 Jan 2007 18:17:59 -0800, "Richard Crowley"
wrote: It seems that the plug-in power on your Sony is noisy, when the AC adaptor is connected. You can blame this on the power adapter, the recorder or the microphone. Maybe even on your mains power. You may be able to solve it by building a simple battery power supply box to go between mic and recorder. This would be, I think, cheap and simple enough to be the thing you try first. Can someone point to a suitable circuit? The circuit is trivial, but should not be necessary. Something is broken here and should be repaired or replaced. Indeed. With hindsight, some part(s) of this system probably should not have been purchased. But they have been, and there may be an easy fix. Can you point us to a source of the trivial circuit, please? |
#7
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"Laurence Payne" wrote ...
"Richard Crowley" wrote: It seems that the plug-in power on your Sony is noisy, when the AC adaptor is connected. You can blame this on the power adapter, the recorder or the microphone. Maybe even on your mains power. You may be able to solve it by building a simple battery power supply box to go between mic and recorder. This would be, I think, cheap and simple enough to be the thing you try first. Can someone point to a suitable circuit? The circuit is trivial, but should not be necessary. Something is broken here and should be repaired or replaced. Indeed. With hindsight, some part(s) of this system probably should not have been purchased. But they have been, and there may be an easy fix. Can you point us to a source of the trivial circuit, please? The circuit is a ~2.5K ohm resistor to a 3-5V supply of clean DC, with a blocking capacitor of your choice. Google returned 522,000 hits for: diy microphone battery box. The problem here is that whatever AC hash is going upstream through the microphone connection (assuming that is the apparent problem) will NOT be solved by an external power source. The AC coupling through the blocking capacitor will faithfully carry the undesired noise just as surely as it is flowing now. And if the problem is that some kind of EMI is being picked up by the microphone/cable, the battery box won't help that, either. The microphone already converted the EMI into audio before it got to the battery box. If the problem is in the MD player, no fooling around with external battery boxes is going to solve the problem. If the problem is in the OP's microphones, they appear to be inexpensive ($5) throw-away things. |
#8
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Thanks for all your thoughts. As you say, something is broken here and
needs repairing or replacing. I tried different locations (200 miles apart) to see if the power supply was the problem. No difference there. I contacted SONY who sent me a replacement adaptor. That didn't change anything. I haven't had a chance to try another plug-in power mic yet, but I did get to try the SP mics with an iHP120. The result was exactly the same: no problems on battery power, a buzz while using them with mains power. So it seems to me that this is where the problem is, even if Sound Professionals are of the opinion that I should just use battery power and be done with it. The mics weren't throwaways ($100) and I still have a few days during which I can return them. This is what I should do, yes? The other solutions are too complicated for a non-techie!!! I'm a classical musician who just wants to record rehearsals and concerts (mostly chamber music), so a small portable mic is desirable. Any suggestions? Thanks for anything more you can offer! |
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