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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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The Akai A-DAM was one of the first digital audio multitracks; a huge
rack-mountable box with separate 12-track meter bridges. I never owned one myself, altough I did run a pair for a while in a university studio 20 years ago. These days I'm looking for an input metering solution I could add to an analog mixer - and I ran into a deal where I could buy a mothballed A-DAM system's meter bridges cheap. The question is, did anyone ever succeed to make these Akai bridges (or any other unit's meter bridges) work with plain vanilla analog signals from a mixer? The Akai units have big D-Sub connectors, not sure if their pins carry digital signal, analog signal, power too, or what mix of these; if inserting them before my mixer is just a matter of manufacturing an analog cable snake ending in a D-Sub plug, or there's more to this. Anyone knows? Thank you in advance. |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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On 12/30/2010 1:47 PM, Keoki wrote:
These days I'm looking for an input metering solution I could add to an analog mixer - and I ran into a deal where I could buy a mothballed A-DAM system's meter bridges cheap. The question is, did anyone ever succeed to make these Akai bridges (or any other unit's meter bridges) work with plain vanilla analog signals from a mixer? I doubt that anyone's ever tried it. I'd say there's a better than 50-50 chance that their inputs are digital. You could open one up and probably make a good guess by looking at what's inside. If you could get them for free, or borrow them to take a look before you decide to buy them, then it might be worth investigating. Otherwise I wouldn't bother. Think of what you'd have to do, and probably without any documentation - figure out the inputs, make a power supply, mount and connect them. A better idea would be to try to find someone parting out an Ampex MM-1100 or MM-1200 recorder and buy those meters. Not only are they analog, but they're pretty close to being real VU meters. -- "Today's production equipment is IT based and cannot be operated without a passing knowledge of computing, although it seems that it can be operated without a passing knowledge of audio." - John Watkinson http://mikeriversaudio.wordpress.com - useful and interesting audio stuff |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Hello Mike,
Thank you for the tip. I went back to eBay, my usual haunting grounds, looking for Ampex parts. There were a busted few, but I had an epiphany. I suspected correctly originally that there must to be a market for self-standing meter bridges. My mistake was to search for the wrong keyword on eBay. I searched originally (and got meager results of) was "meter bridge." The right phrase is "vu meters". Pronto, a whole truckload of devices from TSL, Coleman Audio, Wohler and SM Pro Audio appeared! The largest was 20 channels, but it's just a matter of time before a 24-er shows up, I think. Question. Are LCD meters really that much worse than classical VUs for distortion reading? I kinda like the vertical LED column look, it's easier to keep an eye on 24 while I play / compose. |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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"Keoki" wrote in message
Hello Mike, Thank you for the tip. I went back to eBay, my usual haunting grounds, looking for Ampex parts. There were a busted few, but I had an epiphany. I suspected correctly originally that there must to be a market for self-standing meter bridges. My mistake was to search for the wrong keyword on eBay. I searched originally (and got meager results of) was "meter bridge." The right phrase is "vu meters". Pronto, a whole truckload of devices from TSL, Coleman Audio, Wohler and SM Pro Audio appeared! The largest was 20 channels, but it's just a matter of time before a 24-er shows up, I think. Question. Are LCD meters really that much worse than classical VUs for distortion reading? I kinda like the vertical LED column look, it's easier to keep an eye on 24 while I play / compose. The role of the dynamics of the meter movement have been taken over by electronics. This especially applies to peak response. The actual display device, whether LCD, fluorescent panel, incandescent lamp, CRT, plasma or whatever is not the deciding factor. The level meters on my 02R96 and and Fastrack are very different, but I find both of them to be acceptable. I would rate the Fastrack LCD somehwat higher for the way it stretches peaks and overages. But, that's entirely up to the electronics (and software) that drive the display, not the display devices themselves. |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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On 1/2/2011 5:53 AM, Keoki wrote:
I suspected correctly originally that there must to be a market for self-standing meter bridges. My mistake was to search for the wrong keyword on eBay. I searched originally (and got meager results of) was "meter bridge." The right phrase is "vu meters". Pronto, a whole truckload of devices from TSL, Coleman Audio, Wohler and SM Pro Audio appeared! The largest was 20 channels, but it's just a matter of time before a 24-er shows up, I think. That's all good stuff. I'm surprised that there's one as large as 20 channels. You may need to put two together to get 24 channels. With luck, you'll be able to find two of the same model for cosmetic purposes. Question. Are LCD meters really that much worse than classical VUs for distortion reading? I kinda like the vertical LED column look, it's easier to keep an eye on 24 while I play / compose. You might do well to read the article "Meter Madness" on my web site. In general, a classic VU meter isn't a good tool to tell you when you're approaching digital clipping because, unless you re-scale it, there's 15 dB or more "off scale" before you hit clipping. When I record, I'm very conservative with levels so I've learned to work with VU meters, at least for a stereo mix, but I'm unusual that way. LED meters are rarely close to actual VU meters, neither in scale or dynamic response. The top of the scale (the top LED) is usually at the maximum output or input level of the device that they're monitoring. But the problem with most is a lack of resolution near peak level. The next lowest LED might be 10 dB lower. Meter should be your guide, not something to watch religiously whle you're recording. -- "Today's production equipment is IT based and cannot be operated without a passing knowledge of computing, although it seems that it can be operated without a passing knowledge of audio." - John Watkinson http://mikeriversaudio.wordpress.com - useful and interesting audio stuff |
#6
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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![]() "Mike Rivers" wrote in message ... LED meters are rarely close to actual VU meters, neither in scale or dynamic response. As someone else said, LED's simply display whatever the maker decided for their drive electronics. VU or PPM characteristics are quite possible, with the benefit that you can either at the flick of a switch when so designed. Or both at the same time in far less space than an analog meter. The top of the scale (the top LED) is usually at the maximum output or input level of the device that they're monitoring. But the problem with most is a lack of resolution near peak level. The next lowest LED might be 10 dB lower. Would be a fairly uncommon "meter" that had 10dB between the top 2 LED's. More likely 3dB. *Many* would have 10dB or more between the bottom 2 of course, but the more common arrangement is for the gap to decrease as you go up, and *not* be just a constant gap across the whole range. Trevor. |
#7
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Keoki wrote:
Question. Are LCD meters really that much worse than classical VUs for distortion reading? I kinda like the vertical LED column look, it's easier to keep an eye on 24 while I play / compose. First it depends on what you want to read. Many of the LED meters do not have VU ballistics when they claim they do. This may or may not be a problem depending on what ballistics you expect. Secondly it depends on the meter. Some LED meters don't have enough elements to be useful, some do. I like the RME and Dorrough meters, which are more versatile than regular VU meters. On the other hand, with a console bridge you don't need a lot of accuracy, mostly you need to know just basic ballpark levels there. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#8
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On 1/2/2011 4:58 PM, Trevor wrote:
Would be a fairly uncommon "meter" that had 10dB between the top 2 LED's. More likely 3dB. Wishful thinking. But look at any Mackie or Behringer mixer. There's more of those than anything else, and that's where too many people get the idea of how a meter is supposed to look (and wonder why their levels aren't hot enough when it was going "almost all the way to the top" most of the time. -- "Today's production equipment is IT based and cannot be operated without a passing knowledge of computing, although it seems that it can be operated without a passing knowledge of audio." - John Watkinson http://mikeriversaudio.wordpress.com - useful and interesting audio stuff |
#9
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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I saw a nice looking Wohler MSLV-120 today on ebay... looked at the
back panel... what the @#$%! "Phoenix connectors?" (the manual calls these abortive contraptions) What were these people thinking? |
#10
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Keoki wrote:
I saw a nice looking Wohler MSLV-120 today on ebay... looked at the back panel... what the @#$%! "Phoenix connectors?" (the manual calls these abortive contraptions) What were these people thinking? They're cheap, they're very easy to terminate to bare wires with a screwdriver. This makes them very popular in the installed sound world where most equipment gets connected to installed cabling and any time saved terminating the cabling is a big plus. Before we had phoenixes we had terminal strips with screws on the back of lots of broadcast and installed sound gear. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#11
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On Jan 4, 12:58*pm, (Scott Dorsey) wrote:
Before we had phoenixes we had terminal strips with screws on the back of lots of broadcast and installed sound gear. I checked Wohler's other units, all seem to use phoenixes... $9 per phoenix adapter, times 24 channels... the adapters might cost more than the occasional unit itself, second hand! Now here's a phoenix I'd rather see remain ashes... :-) |
#12
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In article ,
Keoki wrote: On Jan 4, 12:58=A0pm, (Scott Dorsey) wrote: Before we had phoenixes we had terminal strips with screws on the back of lots of broadcast and installed sound gear. I checked Wohler's other units, all seem to use phoenixes... $9 per phoenix adapter, times 24 channels... the adapters might cost more than the occasional unit itself, second hand! Now here's a phoenix I'd rather see remain ashes... :-) Adaptors? The connectors are five or ten cents each, you just put them on whatever cables you're using. Digi-Key stocks them, they are field-installable with a Greenie screwdriver. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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