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#1
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It's easy to find male headphone jack-to-female line-level input jack
adapters at Radio Shack, etc. But where can I find one that actually transforms typical headphone jack output levels (30 ohms and below) to those acceptable to line-level inputs (1 kohms and above)? Explanation: I need to pipe some audio from the headphone output of an audio device to the line-level input of a sound card. Because of the higher average voltage and lower impedance of headphone outputs (vs. line-level inputs), doing this usually requires nothing more than a cheap Radio Shack jack adapter, and keeping the headphone output volume set low, so as not to overload the recording device's line-level input. But the source device I'm using is funky. It's headphone output suffers from a high, fixed noise floor. With the device's volume control all the way down, there's lots of soft hiss. As the volume control is turned up, the hiss level remains FIXED while the audio increases above it -- until the audio finally reaches a point where it satisfactorily overcomes that fixed noise floor, for my tastes. The problem is that I can't "crank" the volume of a headphone output going into a line-level input. Doing so overloads the line-level input and I'm left with subtle distortion. And I have no choice but to use THIS device. (Too much work to explain why; just trust me.) So: I need some kind of transformer adapter as described above. Something that would reduce the level of the headphone output, thereby creating the headroom needed to "crank" the headphone output's audio above its fixed noise floor without overloading the sound card line-level input. I hope you "get" what I mean. g Where can such a widget be found? Thanks in advance. |
#2
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Why not just turn it up and use a resistive divider to accommodate the
input of the following device? Kal On Tue, 19 Apr 2005 01:15:00 GMT, "Mars" wrote: It's easy to find male headphone jack-to-female line-level input jack adapters at Radio Shack, etc. But where can I find one that actually transforms typical headphone jack output levels (30 ohms and below) to those acceptable to line-level inputs (1 kohms and above)? Explanation: I need to pipe some audio from the headphone output of an audio device to the line-level input of a sound card. Because of the higher average voltage and lower impedance of headphone outputs (vs. line-level inputs), doing this usually requires nothing more than a cheap Radio Shack jack adapter, and keeping the headphone output volume set low, so as not to overload the recording device's line-level input. But the source device I'm using is funky. It's headphone output suffers from a high, fixed noise floor. With the device's volume control all the way down, there's lots of soft hiss. As the volume control is turned up, the hiss level remains FIXED while the audio increases above it -- until the audio finally reaches a point where it satisfactorily overcomes that fixed noise floor, for my tastes. The problem is that I can't "crank" the volume of a headphone output going into a line-level input. Doing so overloads the line-level input and I'm left with subtle distortion. And I have no choice but to use THIS device. (Too much work to explain why; just trust me.) So: I need some kind of transformer adapter as described above. Something that would reduce the level of the headphone output, thereby creating the headroom needed to "crank" the headphone output's audio above its fixed noise floor without overloading the sound card line-level input. I hope you "get" what I mean. g Where can such a widget be found? Thanks in advance. |
#3
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"Mars" wrote...
It's easy to find male headphone jack-to-female line-level input jack adapters at Radio Shack, etc. But where can I find one that actually transforms typical headphone jack output levels (30 ohms and below) to those acceptable to line-level inputs (1 kohms and above)? Explanation: I need to pipe some audio from the headphone output of an audio device to the line-level input of a sound card. Because of the higher average voltage and lower impedance of headphone outputs (vs. line-level inputs), doing this usually requires nothing more than a cheap Radio Shack jack adapter, and keeping the headphone output volume set low, so as not to overload the recording device's line-level input. But the source device I'm using is funky. It's headphone output suffers from a high, fixed noise floor. With the device's volume control all the way down, there's lots of soft hiss. As the volume control is turned up, the hiss level remains FIXED while the audio increases above it -- until the audio finally reaches a point where it satisfactorily overcomes that fixed noise floor, for my tastes. The problem is that I can't "crank" the volume of a headphone output going into a line-level input. Doing so overloads the line-level input and I'm left with subtle distortion. And I have no choice but to use THIS device. (Too much work to explain why; just trust me.) So: I need some kind of transformer adapter as described above. Something that would reduce the level of the headphone output, thereby creating the headroom needed to "crank" the headphone output's audio above its fixed noise floor without overloading the sound card line-level input. I hope you "get" what I mean. g You already have a low impedance source and a high(er) impedance ("bridging") load. No impedance conversion is necessary. Or likely desirable, either, as it would only add distortion unless you used expensive transformers. If you have more than enough amplitude on the headphone output, (and gain on the line input) and want to mitigate the noise floor, a simple pad would appear to be what you require. This is rather a common method of doing the interface you describe. |
#4
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Mars wrote:
It's easy to find male headphone jack-to-female line-level input jack adapters at Radio Shack, etc. But where can I find one that actually transforms typical headphone jack output levels (30 ohms and below) to those acceptable to line-level inputs (1 kohms and above)? You don't need to. There's no reason not to run a low-Z output into a high-Z input. I need to pipe some audio from the headphone output of an audio device to the line-level input of a sound card. Because of the higher average voltage and lower impedance of headphone outputs (vs. line-level inputs), doing this usually requires nothing more than a cheap Radio Shack jack adapter, and keeping the headphone output volume set low, so as not to overload the recording device's line-level input. That's a level issue rather than an impedance issue. Just use a pad. If you're going into an XLR input, having a bunch of the Shure adjustable XLR pads around is probably a good idea anyway. But the source device I'm using is funky. It's headphone output suffers from a high, fixed noise floor. With the device's volume control all the way down, there's lots of soft hiss. As the volume control is turned up, the hiss level remains FIXED while the audio increases above it -- until the audio finally reaches a point where it satisfactorily overcomes that fixed noise floor, for my tastes. That's bad, and I would say it's probably worth having a tech clean up the output stage, or add an output jack before the gain control. But if you absolutely have to work this way, use a pad. The problem is that I can't "crank" the volume of a headphone output going into a line-level input. Doing so overloads the line-level input and I'm left with subtle distortion. And I have no choice but to use THIS device. (Too much work to explain why; just trust me.) Use a pad. So: I need some kind of transformer adapter as described above. Something that would reduce the level of the headphone output, thereby creating the headroom needed to "crank" the headphone output's audio above its fixed noise floor without overloading the sound card line-level input. I hope you "get" what I mean. g You don't need any transformer adaptor. Use a pad. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#5
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On Tue, 19 Apr 2005 01:15:00 GMT, "Mars" wrote:
It's headphone output suffers from a high, fixed noise floor. With the device's volume control all the way down, there's lots of soft hiss. As the volume control is turned up, the hiss level remains FIXED while the audio increases above it -- until the audio finally reaches a point where it satisfactorily overcomes that fixed noise floor, for my tastes. Doctor, when I hit myself on the head with a hammer it hurts. What can I do? Chris Hornbeck 6x9=42 April 29 |
#6
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Mars wrote:
It's easy to find male headphone jack-to-female line-level input jack adapters at Radio Shack, etc. But where can I find one that actually transforms typical headphone jack output levels (30 ohms and below) to those acceptable to line-level inputs (1 kohms and above)? Explanation: I need to pipe some audio from the headphone output of an audio device to the line-level input of a sound card. Because of the higher average voltage and lower impedance of headphone outputs (vs. line-level inputs), doing this usually requires nothing more than a cheap Radio Shack jack adapter, and keeping the headphone output volume set low, so as not to overload the recording device's line-level input. But the source device I'm using is funky. It's headphone output suffers from a high, fixed noise floor. With the device's volume control all the way down, there's lots of soft hiss. As the volume control is turned up, the hiss level remains FIXED while the audio increases above it -- until the audio finally reaches a point where it satisfactorily overcomes that fixed noise floor, for my tastes. The problem is that I can't "crank" the volume of a headphone output going into a line-level input. Doing so overloads the line-level input and I'm left with subtle distortion. And I have no choice but to use THIS device. (Too much work to explain why; just trust me.) So: I need some kind of transformer adapter as described above. Something that would reduce the level of the headphone output, thereby creating the headroom needed to "crank" the headphone output's audio above its fixed noise floor without overloading the sound card line-level input. I hope you "get" what I mean. g Where can such a widget be found? What you need is a simple attenuator, as others have already indicated. I suspect that one of Radio Shack's line-mounted headphone volume control gizmos will do what you need. |
#7
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Chris Hornbeck wrote:
Doctor, when I hit myself on the head with a hammer it hurts. What can I do? Duuhh! You use a *pad* of course! PapaNate |
#8
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On Tue, 19 Apr 2005 01:15:00 GMT, Mars wrote:
But the source device I'm using is funky. It's headphone output suffers from a high, fixed noise floor. With the device's volume control all the way down, there's lots of soft hiss. As the volume control is turned up, the hiss level remains FIXED while the audio increases above it -- until the audio finally reaches a point where it satisfactorily overcomes that fixed noise floor, for my tastes. As others have said, you don't need anything to go from a normal headphone output to a line input. But I don't think that you've told us all the relevant details here. I would guess that you're trying to send the output of a laptop into a desktop computer and that you're finding that you're getting noise. This is due to a ground loop and in this case a transformer is going to be the easiest way out of the problem. If it isn't a ground loop then you might get away with using an inline headphone volume control box which you might find at Radio Shack. Cheers. James. |
#9
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#10
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