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#41
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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On 2006-04-29, Don Pearce wrote:
To get the best possible noise figure from a mic preamp, you must match the amp input impedance to the microphone. This is 600 ohms in most cases. but: Microphones tend to be somewhere around 100 ohms in most cases. And to get best noise performance, you don't match impedance. You make sure the impedance of the microphone gives the best balance between current noise and voltage noise from the amplifier. The amplifier will be designed to put this point somewhere around the 100 ohms you expect from a mic. 600 ohms is a figure used for line level connections. I own two dynamic microphones (consumer grade ones with unbalanced outputs an 3.5mm plugs) both are 600 ohms. the few pro or semi-pro mics I've handled were also labeled 600 ohms. Transformers don't have "an impedance" as such. They transform the impedance of whatever they are connected to by the square of the turns ratio. So what impedance is presented as a result of putting in a transformer depends on what the impedance of the equipment is. as long as the mutual inductance is above the impedance of the source and sink yes - a VHF balun won't make a good audio DI unit. Bye. Jasen |
#42
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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Don Pearce wrote:
On Fri, 28 Apr 2006 15:36:00 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: True - I was just trying to correct your 1.2k, which while hardly a typo was certainly a slip of the decimal point. No - that's the input impedance of a Neve desk - one of the classic designs. Others too. More modern ones may be higher. Never knew that - thanks. I wonder why? It is a balance between minimising the load on the the mic and keeping noise under control. The optimum noise performance of the original descrete class A Neve mic pres was about 4.8K. A 2:1 transformer gives you 6dB of noise free gain and an input impedance of 1.2K plus all the other benefits of truly balanced floating inputs. Ian |
#43
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.basics
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![]() "Ian Bell" It is a balance between minimising the load on the the mic and keeping noise under control. ** Utter nonsense. No such balancing act exists. The optimum noise performance of the original descrete class A Neve mic pres was about 4.8K. ** ********. A 2:1 transformer gives you 6dB of noise free gain ...... ** Even worse ******** !!! A 2:1 step up tranny provides no noise advantage * AT ALL * since it increases the source impedance as seen by the pre-amp by 4 times and so *doubles* the noise voltage along with the signal voltage. Where the hell do folk get these WACKY ideas ??? and an input impedance of 1.2K plus all the other benefits of truly balanced floating inputs. ** The input impedance is around 1200 ohms direct with most mic pres. Inserting a 2:1 step up REDUCES the load seen by the mic to 300 ohms, likely cutting its output voltage in half. The net effect is a poorer signal to noise ratio. ........ Phil |
#44
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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On Sat, 29 Apr 2006 14:46:45 +0100, Ian Bell
wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Fri, 28 Apr 2006 15:36:00 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: True - I was just trying to correct your 1.2k, which while hardly a typo was certainly a slip of the decimal point. No - that's the input impedance of a Neve desk - one of the classic designs. Others too. More modern ones may be higher. Never knew that - thanks. I wonder why? It is a balance between minimising the load on the the mic and keeping noise under control. The optimum noise performance of the original descrete class A Neve mic pres was about 4.8K. A 2:1 transformer gives you 6dB of noise free gain and an input impedance of 1.2K plus all the other benefits of truly balanced floating inputs. Ian Thanks. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#45
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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![]() "Jasen Betts" wrote in message ... On 2006-04-29, Don Pearce wrote: To get the best possible noise figure from a mic preamp, you must match the amp input impedance to the microphone. This is 600 ohms in most cases. but: Microphones tend to be somewhere around 100 ohms in most cases. And to get best noise performance, you don't match impedance. You make sure the impedance of the microphone gives the best balance between current noise and voltage noise from the amplifier. The amplifier will be designed to put this point somewhere around the 100 ohms you expect from a mic. 600 ohms is a figure used for line level connections. I own two dynamic microphones (consumer grade ones with unbalanced outputs an 3.5mm plugs) both are 600 ohms. the few pro or semi-pro mics I've handled were also labeled 600 ohms. Transformers don't have "an impedance" as such. They transform the impedance of whatever they are connected to by the square of the turns ratio. So what impedance is presented as a result of putting in a transformer depends on what the impedance of the equipment is. as long as the mutual inductance is above the impedance of the source and sink yes - a VHF balun won't make a good audio DI unit. Bye. Jasen Hello Jasen, Excuse me for butting in, but there is a difference between the advertised impedance and the actual impedance. If you measure the AC microphone impedance, you will see it is usually lower that the advertised value and also varies across frequency. Further, unbalanced microphones are typically higher in impedance than balanced. 600 in the norm for unbalanced and 200 for balanced. I good rule of thumb used for years is the preamp should present a load of at least 5x the rated microphone impedance. This rule prevents frequency coloration of the signal due to the frequency dependence of the actual source impedance. Dynamic microphones have the most variation over frequency, and capacitor or electret microphones, the least. A nit on your statement quoted above, I assume you meant 'magnetizing inductance' rather than 'mutual inductance'.. David |
#46
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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In article ,
Jasen Betts wrote: the few pro or semi-pro mics I've handled were also labeled 600 ohms. Hmm. If you go to the AKG or Sennheiser sites and check out the specs there most are around 150 ohms with a recommended input impedance of greater than 1k. -- *Some days we are the flies; some days we are the windscreen.* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#47
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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Phil Allison wrote:
"Matti Adolfsen" To get the best possible noise figure from a mic preamp, you must match the amp input impedance to the microphone. ** Absolutely FALSE !!! The best signal to noise ratio is obtained when the mic impedance is MUCH less that the load impedance. This allows the mic to generate the greatest signal voltage at the input while noise is a function of actual mic impedance in the audio band. Check your source information, there might be errors in your statement. I'm talking about the thermal noise created in the resistive part of the dynamic microphone. This is the metohd used by most european broadcast companies to evaluate mic preamp performance. Best noise figure can be obtained if the power matching is correct: source and load impedances must be matched: Maximum power transfer from microphone to preamp, and reduction of the noise source impedance to 50% of the original. This theory is used in RF design too. Btw, the best noise figure I've measured so far was from a TELEFUNKEN V-76 tube amplifier. 0.5dB this preamp has high turns ratio input transformer (about 1:50) feeding a pentode amplifier. This is 600 ohms in most cases. ** Crapology. Not so nice terminology, but this time correct information. Correct impedance can be found from manufacturers websites and international standards. I checked my sources: - MIC input source impedance from 0 to 200 ohms (N10, page 6) - MIC input source impedance for noise measrurements: 200 ohms (N10, page 14) - Nominal impedance of NEUMANN U-87: 200 ohms. - Minimum load impedance for U-87 microphone: 1 k ohms (www.neumann.com). Sources: - Elements of infrared technology, page 236 - N10 Nordic technical recommendation 3rd edition, oct 1983 Further reading: - Mathematical noise modeling and analysis of some popular preamplifier circuit topologies. T.F. Darling, J.AES Vol 35, 1987 - Noise of sources, John Maxwell, National Semiconductor 1977 Matti |
#48
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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![]() "Matti Adolfsen" To get the best possible noise figure from a mic preamp, you must match the amp input impedance to the microphone. ** Absolutely FALSE !!! The best signal to noise ratio is obtained when the mic impedance is MUCH less that the load impedance. This allows the mic to generate the greatest signal voltage at the input while noise is a function of actual mic impedance in the audio band. Check your source information, ** Check the source of your's - ****wit. It needs wiping immediately. I'm talking about the thermal noise created in the resistive part of the dynamic microphone. ** So am I. But I actually know what I am talking about. Best noise figure can be obtained if the power matching is correct: ** Absolute BULL**** !! source and load impedances must be matched: ** Absolute BULL**** !! Maximum power transfer from microphone to preamp, and reduction of the noise source impedance to 50% of the original. This theory is used in RF design too. ** RF theory must not be applied to audio.. The world of audio uses "max voltage transfer" when linking sources to loads. You are a moronic ass. **** OFF. .......... Phil |
#49
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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![]() "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Don Pearce wrote: But being a total of approx 13k will have little effect across 150 ohms. True - I was just trying to correct your 1.2k, which while hardly a typo was certainly a slip of the decimal point. No - that's the input impedance of a Neve desk - one of the classic designs. Others too. More modern ones may be higher. A typical modern console has around a 2k ohm impedance mic input. 'Rule of thumb' is to load with 10x source impedance. Graham |
#50
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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![]() "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Don Pearce wrote: But being a total of approx 13k will have little effect across 150 ohms. True - I was just trying to correct your 1.2k, which while hardly a typo was certainly a slip of the decimal point. No - that's the input impedance of a Neve desk - one of the classic designs. Others too. More modern ones may be higher. A typical modern console has around a 2k ohm impedance mic input. 'Rule of thumb' is to load with 10x source impedance. Graham |
#51
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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![]() Don Pearce wrote: On Fri, 28 Apr 2006 15:36:00 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Don Pearce wrote: But being a total of approx 13k will have little effect across 150 ohms. True - I was just trying to correct your 1.2k, which while hardly a typo was certainly a slip of the decimal point. No - that's the input impedance of a Neve desk - one of the classic designs. Others too. More modern ones may be higher. One more thing - the Neve mic pre has a pretty poor noise performance. At -128dBu equivalent at the input, that is about 6dB above pure thermal noise. That is 4 or 5 dB more noise than they should be achieving. Please do your sums properly Don before making gaffes like that ! Graham |
#52
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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![]() "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Matti Adolfsen wrote: To get the best possible noise figure from a mic preamp, you must match the amp input impedance to the microphone. This is 600 ohms in most cases. but: Could you name a modern mic with an actual 600 ohm (balanced) output impedance? Or indeed any? Loads of the inexpensive but half decent Asian mics are genuinely 600 ohms. Graham |
#53
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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![]() "Poopie Bear" Don Pearce wrote: One more thing - the Neve mic pre has a pretty poor noise performance. At -128dBu equivalent at the input, that is about 6dB above pure thermal noise. That is 4 or 5 dB more noise than they should be achieving. Please do your sums properly Don before making gaffes like that ! ** How hysterical. Dopey Drawers Pearce's worst gaffes ARE his erroneous sums. Plus his INSANE insistence that RF and audio are the same !!! ........... Phil |
#54
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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On Mon, 01 May 2006 08:38:56 +0100, Pooh Bear
wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Fri, 28 Apr 2006 15:36:00 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Don Pearce wrote: But being a total of approx 13k will have little effect across 150 ohms. True - I was just trying to correct your 1.2k, which while hardly a typo was certainly a slip of the decimal point. No - that's the input impedance of a Neve desk - one of the classic designs. Others too. More modern ones may be higher. One more thing - the Neve mic pre has a pretty poor noise performance. At -128dBu equivalent at the input, that is about 6dB above pure thermal noise. That is 4 or 5 dB more noise than they should be achieving. Please do your sums properly Don before making gaffes like that ! Graham Thank you! I did make a gaffe. The actual figure for the Neve noise figure is about 3dB. That is still unforgivably poor for high end kit - it is in fact no better than my little Behringer. Ten years ago I was designing satellite receivers working up at 12GHz. The noise figure I was working to was 0.3dB. The last audio preamp I made had a noise figure of about 0.5dB, because I was willing to use multiple parallel discrete transistors for the input circuitry. Making it any better than this would have been possible, but unwarranted because unlike the satellite receiver, it wasn't pointing at a cold sky, but a warm microphone. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#55
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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![]() "Don Pearce" Poopie Bear One more thing - the Neve mic pre has a pretty poor noise performance. At -128dBu equivalent at the input, that is about 6dB above pure thermal noise. That is 4 or 5 dB more noise than they should be achieving. Please do your sums properly Don before making gaffes like that ! Thank you! I did make a gaffe. ** A *****ing stupid* one. Like hundreds of others and another one, right now ! The actual figure for the Neve noise figure is about 3dB. ** The published curve shows it is typically less than 2 dB. That is still unforgivably poor for high end kit - it is in fact no better than my little Behringer. ** It is SFA additional noise in practice. PLUS none at all when a typical condenser mic is used, as is the norm. Ten years ago I was designing satellite receivers working up at 12GHz. ** Who gives a rat's **** ? Go stick you irrelevant & erroneous RF ****e up you ****ing ARSE ! You are NOTHING but a trouble making, posturing, pommy ARROGANT PIG - Don Pearce. The last audio preamp I made had a noise figure of about 0.5dB, ** Bet the ASININE ****WIT matched the source and load impedances. Then miscalculated the **REAL** noise figure. ROTFLMAO !!! .......... Phil |
#56
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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In article ,
Pooh Bear wrote: "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Don Pearce wrote: But being a total of approx 13k will have little effect across 150 ohms. True - I was just trying to correct your 1.2k, which while hardly a typo was certainly a slip of the decimal point. No - that's the input impedance of a Neve desk - one of the classic designs. Others too. More modern ones may be higher. A typical modern console has around a 2k ohm impedance mic input. Thanks for that. I did have a quick glance at some specs for modern mixers but those I looked at seemed shy of quoting the mic input impedance. 'Rule of thumb' is to load with 10x source impedance. Yup. Graham -- *To be intoxicated is to feel sophisticated, but not be able to say it. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#57
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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![]() Don Pearce wrote: On Mon, 01 May 2006 08:38:56 +0100, Pooh Bear wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Fri, 28 Apr 2006 15:36:00 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Don Pearce wrote: But being a total of approx 13k will have little effect across 150 ohms. True - I was just trying to correct your 1.2k, which while hardly a typo was certainly a slip of the decimal point. No - that's the input impedance of a Neve desk - one of the classic designs. Others too. More modern ones may be higher. One more thing - the Neve mic pre has a pretty poor noise performance. At -128dBu equivalent at the input, that is about 6dB above pure thermal noise. That is 4 or 5 dB more noise than they should be achieving. Please do your sums properly Don before making gaffes like that ! Graham Thank you! I did make a gaffe. No problem, we all goof up from time to time. ;-) The actual figure for the Neve noise figure is about 3dB. That is still unforgivably poor for high end kit - it is in fact no better than my little Behringer. Indeed Ten years ago I was designing satellite receivers working up at 12GHz. The noise figure I was working to was 0.3dB. The last audio preamp I made had a noise figure of about 0.5dB, because I was willing to use multiple parallel discrete transistors for the input circuitry. Care to name which ones you were using ? Making it any better than this would have been possible, but unwarranted because unlike the satellite receiver, it wasn't pointing at a cold sky, but a warm microphone. Back in the days when I was at Neve, the then V series ( Mks 1 and 2 ) consoles ( and just about everything else except the digital console ) had a mic pre using a step up transformer and a 5534. The quoted noise for that was a rather poor -126dBu and it didn't actually measure any better either IIRC ! I was somewhat surprised to say the least. The recent mic pres I've done ( quite economy types ) manage about -128.5 - as long as you factor in the extra little bit to account for the true noise equivalent bandwidth of the measurement set : -3dB @ 22kHz 4th order is about 23kHz NEB. Graham |
#58
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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On Mon, 01 May 2006 10:02:35 +0100, Pooh Bear
wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Mon, 01 May 2006 08:38:56 +0100, Pooh Bear wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Fri, 28 Apr 2006 15:36:00 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Don Pearce wrote: But being a total of approx 13k will have little effect across 150 ohms. True - I was just trying to correct your 1.2k, which while hardly a typo was certainly a slip of the decimal point. No - that's the input impedance of a Neve desk - one of the classic designs. Others too. More modern ones may be higher. One more thing - the Neve mic pre has a pretty poor noise performance. At -128dBu equivalent at the input, that is about 6dB above pure thermal noise. That is 4 or 5 dB more noise than they should be achieving. Please do your sums properly Don before making gaffes like that ! Graham Thank you! I did make a gaffe. No problem, we all goof up from time to time. ;-) The actual figure for the Neve noise figure is about 3dB. That is still unforgivably poor for high end kit - it is in fact no better than my little Behringer. Indeed Ten years ago I was designing satellite receivers working up at 12GHz. The noise figure I was working to was 0.3dB. The last audio preamp I made had a noise figure of about 0.5dB, because I was willing to use multiple parallel discrete transistors for the input circuitry. Care to name which ones you were using ? Yes - I have a box of old MAT-01s from PMI. They are strictly reserved for such projects. I don't know if they are still available. Making it any better than this would have been possible, but unwarranted because unlike the satellite receiver, it wasn't pointing at a cold sky, but a warm microphone. Back in the days when I was at Neve, the then V series ( Mks 1 and 2 ) consoles ( and just about everything else except the digital console ) had a mic pre using a step up transformer and a 5534. The quoted noise for that was a rather poor -126dBu and it didn't actually measure any better either IIRC ! I was somewhat surprised to say the least. The 5534 is not bad, but I wouldn't say it is the quietest way of doing things. I had to make a very small preamp (just one op amp) for a high impedance (50k) microphone. I searched for ages for quiet op amp before I realised that an OP27 is optimized pretty well perfectly at this impedance, with an excess noise of only about 1dB. Amazing! The recent mic pres I've done ( quite economy types ) manage about -128.5 - as long as you factor in the extra little bit to account for the true noise equivalent bandwidth of the measurement set : -3dB @ 22kHz 4th order is about 23kHz NEB. Graham I really wish noise was expressed as a noise figure, rather than a level. That way it wouldn't matter what impedance you were using, you would simply have a figure of merit that told you how much worse the pre was than theoretically perfect. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#59
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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![]() "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Pooh Bear wrote: "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Don Pearce wrote: But being a total of approx 13k will have little effect across 150 ohms. True - I was just trying to correct your 1.2k, which while hardly a typo was certainly a slip of the decimal point. No - that's the input impedance of a Neve desk - one of the classic designs. Others too. More modern ones may be higher. A typical modern console has around a 2k ohm impedance mic input. Thanks for that. I did have a quick glance at some specs for modern mixers but those I looked at seemed shy of quoting the mic input impedance. 'Rule of thumb' is to load with 10x source impedance. Yup. Actually, as a follow-up, following some discussion in r.a.p , my most recent mic pre featured a modest increase in input Z to 2.5k. I note from the links posted here that Rupert has gone as far as going to 10k now, which did surprise me a little. I'd like to spend some time listening to the effect of loading on various mics actually. Graham |
#60
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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![]() "Poopie ****wit Bear" Actually, as a follow-up, following some discussion in r.a.p , my most recent mic pre featured a modest increase in input Z to 2.5k. ** Wank, wank ,wank ,wank, wank ,wank ..... I note from the links posted here that Rupert has gone as far as going to 10k now, which did surprise me a little. ** The simple reason was given - you blind as a bat ass. The mic input on that unit doubles as a balanced line input. ........ Phil |
#61
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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![]() Don Pearce wrote: On Mon, 01 May 2006 10:02:35 +0100, Pooh Bear wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Mon, 01 May 2006 08:38:56 +0100, Pooh Bear wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Fri, 28 Apr 2006 15:36:00 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Don Pearce wrote: But being a total of approx 13k will have little effect across 150 ohms. True - I was just trying to correct your 1.2k, which while hardly a typo was certainly a slip of the decimal point. No - that's the input impedance of a Neve desk - one of the classic designs. Others too. More modern ones may be higher. One more thing - the Neve mic pre has a pretty poor noise performance. At -128dBu equivalent at the input, that is about 6dB above pure thermal noise. That is 4 or 5 dB more noise than they should be achieving. Please do your sums properly Don before making gaffes like that ! Graham Thank you! I did make a gaffe. No problem, we all goof up from time to time. ;-) The actual figure for the Neve noise figure is about 3dB. That is still unforgivably poor for high end kit - it is in fact no better than my little Behringer. Indeed Ten years ago I was designing satellite receivers working up at 12GHz. The noise figure I was working to was 0.3dB. The last audio preamp I made had a noise figure of about 0.5dB, because I was willing to use multiple parallel discrete transistors for the input circuitry. Care to name which ones you were using ? Yes - I have a box of old MAT-01s from PMI. They are strictly reserved for such projects. I don't know if they are still available. I recall the beast. Somewhere I think I have some of those similar Nat Semi parts that featured multiple devices on-die. Forget the part number now. Oh no - I *was* right - the LM394 - just checked in case. Though that would be an IC but the M just means monolithic. They're not even insanely expensive now ! Also took a look at some esoteric fet data a while back. Noise somewhere down in the 500pV/sqrt Hz region. Interfet is the company. Making it any better than this would have been possible, but unwarranted because unlike the satellite receiver, it wasn't pointing at a cold sky, but a warm microphone. Back in the days when I was at Neve, the then V series ( Mks 1 and 2 ) consoles ( and just about everything else except the digital console ) had a mic pre using a step up transformer and a 5534. The quoted noise for that was a rather poor -126dBu and it didn't actually measure any better either IIRC ! I was somewhat surprised to say the least. The 5534 is not bad, but I wouldn't say it is the quietest way of doing things. Indeed not. They could have used something from AD or PMI and instantly improved the noise figure. I had to make a very small preamp (just one op amp) for a high impedance (50k) microphone. I searched for ages for quiet op amp before I realised that an OP27 is optimized pretty well perfectly at this impedance, with an excess noise of only about 1dB. Amazing! They're good op-amps. Never had the budget to design them into anything though. :-( The recent mic pres I've done ( quite economy types ) manage about -128.5 - as long as you factor in the extra little bit to account for the true noise equivalent bandwidth of the measurement set : -3dB @ 22kHz 4th order is about 23kHz NEB. Graham I really wish noise was expressed as a noise figure, rather than a level. That way it wouldn't matter what impedance you were using, you would simply have a figure of merit that told you how much worse the pre was than theoretically perfect. Hmmm, I wonder how that would go down with those who 'cheat' by using a 150 ohm source instead of 200. I note that Mackie ( I think ) is now quoting noise with the input *shorted* too. Graham |
#62
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On Mon, 01 May 2006 10:36:06 +0100, Pooh Bear
wrote: Yes - I have a box of old MAT-01s from PMI. They are strictly reserved for such projects. I don't know if they are still available. I recall the beast. Somewhere I think I have some of those similar Nat Semi parts that featured multiple devices on-die. Forget the part number now. Oh no - I *was* right - the LM394 - just checked in case. Though that would be an IC but the M just means monolithic. They're not even insanely expensive now ! Yes that is very similar. The great thing about using these discretes as front ends is that the knee frequency for 1/f noise is way lower than the transistors in the average op-amp. So not only don't they hiss - they don't rumble either. Three of them in parallel is about right for a mic at about 150 to 200 ohms. Also took a look at some esoteric fet data a while back. Noise somewhere down in the 500pV/sqrt Hz region. Interfet is the company. But what about the current noise? You need to multiply that by the source impedance to add in its effect. I've looked at a few FET input op amps with amazingly low voltage noise, and this always more than makes up the difference. I really wish noise was expressed as a noise figure, rather than a level. That way it wouldn't matter what impedance you were using, you would simply have a figure of merit that told you how much worse the pre was than theoretically perfect. Hmmm, I wonder how that would go down with those who 'cheat' by using a 150 ohm source instead of 200. I note that Mackie ( I think ) is now quoting noise with the input *shorted* too. Yup, you really do have to read specs with a cynical eye these days. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#63
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In article ,
Don Pearce wrote: Thank you! I did make a gaffe. The actual figure for the Neve noise figure is about 3dB. That is still unforgivably poor for high end kit - it is in fact no better than my little Behringer. Heh heh. But I'll guarantee which one sounds better... -- *OK, who stopped payment on my reality check? Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#64
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![]() "Don Pearce" Poopie Bear Yes that is very similar. The great thing about using these discretes as front ends is that the knee frequency for 1/f noise is way lower than the transistors in the average op-amp. So not only don't they hiss - they don't rumble either. Three of them in parallel is about right for a mic at about 150 to 200 ohms. ** More totally asinine crapology from the Pommy RF Fool. Audio band white noise is totally dominated by high frequency noise !! Hence - there is no audible "rumble noise" from mic pres based on op-amps or transistors. But what about the current noise? ** With a FET ? With a 200 ohms source ?? What drugs is this ****ING JERK taking ??? Or not taking ?? Hmmm, I wonder how that would go down with those who 'cheat' by using a 150 ohm source instead of 200. I note that Mackie ( I think ) is now quoting noise with the input *shorted* too. ** Some condenser mics have very low output Zs - less than 20 ohms. Not wrong to quite the noise for that case. ........... Phil |
#65
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In article ,
Don Pearce wrote: Yes that is very similar. The great thing about using these discretes as front ends is that the knee frequency for 1/f noise is way lower than the transistors in the average op-amp. So not only don't they hiss - they don't rumble either. Three of them in parallel is about right for a mic at about 150 to 200 ohms. Last time I played with this idea I found it very sensitive to RF interference. -- *Always borrow money from pessimists - they don't expect it back * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#66
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On Mon, 01 May 2006 10:55:59 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote: In article , Don Pearce wrote: Thank you! I did make a gaffe. The actual figure for the Neve noise figure is about 3dB. That is still unforgivably poor for high end kit - it is in fact no better than my little Behringer. Heh heh. But I'll guarantee which one sounds better... I wouldn't put money on that if I were you. I've measured the performance of the Behringer, and I can find no fault with it. It has problems, of course, but they are limitations imposed by cheap implementation - certainly not in the sound department. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#67
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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![]() "Dave Plowman (No-News)" Dumb Pommy Prick Yes that is very similar. The great thing about using these discretes as front ends is that the knee frequency for 1/f noise is way lower than the transistors in the average op-amp. So not only don't they hiss - they don't rumble either. Three of them in parallel is about right for a mic at about 150 to 200 ohms. Last time I played with this idea I found it very sensitive to RF interference. ** Matching the source and load impedances RF style does that !! You Bloody IDIOT !! .......... Phil |
#68
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On Mon, 01 May 2006 11:39:50 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote: In article , Don Pearce wrote: Yes that is very similar. The great thing about using these discretes as front ends is that the knee frequency for 1/f noise is way lower than the transistors in the average op-amp. So not only don't they hiss - they don't rumble either. Three of them in parallel is about right for a mic at about 150 to 200 ohms. Last time I played with this idea I found it very sensitive to RF interference. Well, there should have been nothing inherently RF sensitive about it. Like any other sensitive system, it needs all the usual RF-proofing tweaks to keep it sane. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#69
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Don Pearce wrote:
One more thing - the Neve mic pre has a pretty poor noise performance. At -128dBu equivalent at the input, that is about 6dB above pure thermal noise. That is 4 or 5 dB more noise than they should be achieving. Even if that were correct it is immaterial in most situations where the gain is not set to maximum (and that is the ONLY place a mic amp achieves an equivalent input figure this good). As gain is reduced, output noise begins to dominate and the old Neve mixers still beat most 'modern' designs in that respect. Put simply, equivalent input noise is only part of the story. ian |
#70
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Don Pearce wrote:
Thank you! I did make a gaffe. The actual figure for the Neve noise figure is about 3dB. That is still unforgivably poor for high end kit - it is in fact no better than my little Behringer. Ten years ago I was designing satellite receivers working up at 12GHz. The noise figure I was working to was 0.3dB. The last audio preamp I made had a noise figure of about 0.5dB, because I was willing to use multiple parallel discrete transistors for the input circuitry. Making it any better than this would have been possible, but unwarranted because unlike the satellite receiver, it wasn't pointing at a cold sky, but a warm microphone. Not that is really matters. An improvement in noise figure of 2.5dB will only improve the signal to noise at very high gains by the same amount. Unless you are using dynamics on very quiet sources, the self noise of your condensor mic is the limiting factor not the noise figure of the mic pre. Ian |
#71
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On Mon, 01 May 2006 12:25:39 +0100, Ian Bell
wrote: Don Pearce wrote: One more thing - the Neve mic pre has a pretty poor noise performance. At -128dBu equivalent at the input, that is about 6dB above pure thermal noise. That is 4 or 5 dB more noise than they should be achieving. Even if that were correct it is immaterial in most situations where the gain is not set to maximum (and that is the ONLY place a mic amp achieves an equivalent input figure this good). As gain is reduced, output noise begins to dominate and the old Neve mixers still beat most 'modern' designs in that respect. Put simply, equivalent input noise is only part of the story. ian It is, as you say, important where the gain is high. But the rest is plain wrong. If you want to include the gain setting in the noise performance it is done by R = Rs + 1/G, where Rs is the source resistance, G is the gain and R is the resulting effective source resistance. The result is that even at unity gain, the source resistance is only increased by 1 ohm - barely changed from 150 ohms. The degree to which gain can be turned down before input noise ceases to be dominant is that point where the noise figure of the line system is equal to the input noise times the gain of the preamp. That should be a gain of perhaps two or three. If you are doing that with the level control, you should be using a preamp at all. As for the rest of the mixer, it is running at line level, and if noise can't be kept a long, long way below that, something is seriously wrong. Output noise should never, ever dominate a circuit. The main point about running at less than high gain is that the sound you are capturing is likely to be loud, so the signal to noise ratio is high. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#72
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On Mon, 01 May 2006 12:29:45 +0100, Ian Bell
wrote: Don Pearce wrote: Thank you! I did make a gaffe. The actual figure for the Neve noise figure is about 3dB. That is still unforgivably poor for high end kit - it is in fact no better than my little Behringer. Ten years ago I was designing satellite receivers working up at 12GHz. The noise figure I was working to was 0.3dB. The last audio preamp I made had a noise figure of about 0.5dB, because I was willing to use multiple parallel discrete transistors for the input circuitry. Making it any better than this would have been possible, but unwarranted because unlike the satellite receiver, it wasn't pointing at a cold sky, but a warm microphone. Not that is really matters. An improvement in noise figure of 2.5dB will only improve the signal to noise at very high gains by the same amount. Unless you are using dynamics on very quiet sources, the self noise of your condensor mic is the limiting factor not the noise figure of the mic pre. Ian True for condensors, but this was for a dynamic in a very quiet situation. Generally when I am designing gear for myself, I see no reason to make it any worse than I actually need to. I don't object to spending an extra couple of quid for that, especially knowing that if professional gear were made that way they would be charging another ten grand. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#73
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![]() "Don Pearce" Ian Bell Even if that were correct it is immaterial in most situations where the gain is not set to maximum (and that is the ONLY place a mic amp achieves an equivalent input figure this good). As gain is reduced, output noise begins to dominate and the old Neve mixers still beat most 'modern' designs in that respect. Put simply, equivalent input noise is only part of the story. It is, as you say, important where the gain is high. But the rest is plain wrong. If you want to include the gain setting in the noise performance it is done by R = Rs + 1/G, where Rs is the source resistance, G is the gain and R is the resulting effective source resistance. ** A completely wrong formula. Where ever did it come from ? One of this fool's dusty old books on RF theory ? The result is that even at unity gain, the source resistance is only increased by 1 ohm - barely changed from 150 ohms. ** Good grief !! Has this cretin no idea how a common mode gain control operates ???? Typically, residual noise at the OUTPUT goes almost in hand with gain for settings between 60dB and 40 dB. Further gain reduction has a rapidly diminishing effect on the residual noise, it may drop to 0.02mV in a good design at gains of 20 dB and under. So, the ein goes like this - 128dBu at 60 dB gain, - 125dBu at 40 dB gain - 112dBu at 20 dB gain. The equivalent output noise ratios rel 0 dBu are therefo 68 dB, 88 dB and 92 dB. A preamp can usually output 22dBu, so the maximum possible ratios a 90 dB, 110 dB and 114 dB. ** The SSM 2017 is a typical high performance mic preamp in IC form - ie not an op-amp. http://ezphysics.nchu.edu.tw/prophys...et/SSM2017.pdf Note how the ein figures vary with gain setting. ........ Phil |
#74
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Don Pearce wrote:
Thank you! I did make a gaffe. The actual figure for the Neve noise figure is about 3dB. That is still unforgivably poor for high end kit - it is in fact no better than my little Behringer. Ten years ago I was designing satellite receivers working up at 12GHz. The noise figure I was working to was 0.3dB. Its a lot easier to reduce the noise figure at a narrow bandwidth at microwave frequencies. -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
#75
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On Mon, 01 May 2006 13:24:48 GMT, "Michael A. Terrell"
wrote: Don Pearce wrote: Thank you! I did make a gaffe. The actual figure for the Neve noise figure is about 3dB. That is still unforgivably poor for high end kit - it is in fact no better than my little Behringer. Ten years ago I was designing satellite receivers working up at 12GHz. The noise figure I was working to was 0.3dB. Its a lot easier to reduce the noise figure at a narrow bandwidth at microwave frequencies. Narrow bandwidth? I don't call a bandwidth of nearly 2GHz narrow. And asitappens, I can achieve these sorts of figure at audio as well. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#76
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Don Pearce wrote:
On Mon, 01 May 2006 13:24:48 GMT, "Michael A. Terrell" wrote: Don Pearce wrote: Thank you! I did make a gaffe. The actual figure for the Neve noise figure is about 3dB. That is still unforgivably poor for high end kit - it is in fact no better than my little Behringer. Ten years ago I was designing satellite receivers working up at 12GHz. The noise figure I was working to was 0.3dB. Its a lot easier to reduce the noise figure at a narrow bandwidth at microwave frequencies. Narrow bandwidth? I don't call a bandwidth of nearly 2GHz narrow. And asitappens, I can achieve these sorts of figure at audio as well. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com 2 GHz at 12 GHz is 16.67% which is narrow. Don't tell me that there is no filtering at all. A circulator or isolator has a usable bandwidth which keeps out of band noise out of the amp. One of my KU band receivers is aboard the ISS. Audio is true broadband, from DC to whatever the upper limit is set at by the design and limitations of the components if it is DC coupled, and from less than 100 Hz if its AC coupled. -- Service to my country? Been there, Done that, and I've got my DD214 to prove it. Member of DAV #85. Michael A. Terrell Central Florida |
#77
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In article ,
Don Pearce wrote: Narrow bandwidth? I don't call a bandwidth of nearly 2GHz narrow. Don't these things tend to be measured in octaves, as it were? -- *A snooze button is a poor substitute for no alarm clock at all * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#79
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On Mon, 01 May 2006 13:50:43 GMT, "Michael A. Terrell"
wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Mon, 01 May 2006 13:24:48 GMT, "Michael A. Terrell" wrote: Don Pearce wrote: Thank you! I did make a gaffe. The actual figure for the Neve noise figure is about 3dB. That is still unforgivably poor for high end kit - it is in fact no better than my little Behringer. Ten years ago I was designing satellite receivers working up at 12GHz. The noise figure I was working to was 0.3dB. Its a lot easier to reduce the noise figure at a narrow bandwidth at microwave frequencies. Narrow bandwidth? I don't call a bandwidth of nearly 2GHz narrow. And asitappens, I can achieve these sorts of figure at audio as well. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com 2 GHz at 12 GHz is 16.67% which is narrow. Don't tell me that there is no filtering at all. A circulator or isolator has a usable bandwidth which keeps out of band noise out of the amp. One of my KU band receivers is aboard the ISS. Of course there is filtering. The waveguide coupler as a bandwidth, as does the mixer. The image filter then has a bandwidth, and finally the IF amplifier. Despite all this filtering - none of which is lossless - the noise figure still happens. It really isn't easy even compared to audio. Well done for having a receiver aboard ISS, but ground transmitters tend not to be particularly power-limited, so the noise figure probably isn't quite the issue it is with a terrestrial receiver. In fact there would be no point because it is pointing at the earth, which is hot. Audio is true broadband, from DC to whatever the upper limit is set at by the design and limitations of the components if it is DC coupled, and from less than 100 Hz if its AC coupled. But achieving low noise at audio - however you want to describe its bandwidth - is actually pretty trivial. The fact is that manufacturers choose not to implement it because they can make something that is "reasonable" for a lot less money. The business of achieving low noise at audio doesn't rely on being able to juggle S parameters, physical layout, board materials and mechanical design like microwave. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#80
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On Mon, 01 May 2006 14:57:42 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote: In article , Don Pearce wrote: Narrow bandwidth? I don't call a bandwidth of nearly 2GHz narrow. Don't these things tend to be measured in octaves, as it were? Yes, but remember we are talking about scraping away at the last vestiges of the state of the art here. Optimum noise match varies over that range, and designing matching structures that keep the complex impedance of the waveguide transition at the exact conjugate of the input transistor noise match over such a bandwidth really is far from simple. By comparison audio is a breeze - I promise. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
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