Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Greetings.
I'm going to be announcing the Glenwood Waterama parade for the 5th time on July 26. My area along the parade route covers several blocks, so a sound system with speakers, amplifier, and microphone are provided for my use. The mike is the only item plugged into the amplifier, a device I'm somewhat familiar with from theatre work. The input ports look like simple quarter inch females to me. If I bring an RCA 1/8th inch line and a quarter inch adapter to put on one end, will I be able to plug my iPod into the sound system and play music for the crowd before the parade starts? We're quite a ways down the route so there's a lot of time to kill before the initial color guard arrives. Thanks. RW ** Posted from http://www.teranews.com ** |
#2
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jul 9, 7:45*am, Rebecca Webb wrote:
Greetings. I'm going to be announcing the Glenwood Waterama parade for the 5th time on July 26. *My area along the parade route covers several blocks, so a sound system with speakers, amplifier, and microphone are provided for my use. *The mike is the only item plugged into the amplifier, a device I'm somewhat familiar with from theatre work. *The input ports look like simple quarter inch females to me. *If I bring an RCA 1/8th inch line and a quarter inch adapter to put on one end, will I be able to plug my iPod into the sound system and play music for the crowd before the parade starts? *We're quite a ways down the route so there's a lot of time to kill before the initial color guard arrives. *Thanks. RW ** Posted fromhttp://www.teranews.com** Your iPod might have come with a 1/8" to two RCA adapter. If not, I bet you have one laying around if you bought any kind of portable audio system in the last 10 years. Use that along with adapters to turn the male RCA ends into male 1/4" ends. You don't want to run your stereo 1/8" output from your iPod to a mono 1/4" input. It messes up the impedance and could cause damage to the iPod. Also, if you use a mono 1/8" connector in your stereo input the mono plug is just slightly wider than the stereo plug. Over time, this can cause the widening of the jack on the iPod and eventually, you won't make contact when you plug in a stereo headphone or other stereo 1/8" connector. |
#3
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jul 9, 10:45 am, Rebecca Webb wrote:
Greetings. I'm going to be announcing the Glenwood Waterama parade for the 5th time on July 26. My area along the parade route covers several blocks, so a sound system with speakers, amplifier, and microphone are provided for my use. The mike is the only item plugged into the amplifier, a device I'm somewhat familiar with from theatre work. The input ports look like simple quarter inch females to me. If I bring an RCA 1/8th inch line and a quarter inch adapter to put on one end, will I be able to plug my iPod into the sound system and play music for the crowd before the parade starts? We're quite a ways down the route so there's a lot of time to kill before the initial color guard arrives. Thanks. RW ** Posted fromhttp://www.teranews.com** yes |
#4
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Rebecca Webb wrote:
The mike is the only item plugged into the amplifier, a device I'm somewhat familiar with from theatre work. The input ports look like simple quarter inch females to me. If I bring an RCA 1/8th inch line and a quarter inch adapter to put on one end, will I be able to plug my iPod into the sound system and play music for the crowd before the parade starts? Yes, but I would find it worth the trouble and cost to buy a cable with 1/8" stereo plug on one end and dual 1/4 TS plugs on the other, to eliminate the RCA-to-1/4" adapters. -- ha Iraq is Arabic for Vietnam |
#5
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 09 Jul 2008 09:45:42 -0500, Rebecca Webb
wrote: I'm going to be announcing the Glenwood Waterama parade for the 5th time on July 26. My area along the parade route covers several blocks, so a sound system with speakers, amplifier, and microphone are provided for my use. The mike is the only item plugged into the amplifier, a device I'm somewhat familiar with from theatre work. The input ports look like simple quarter inch females to me. If I bring an RCA 1/8th inch line and a quarter inch adapter to put on one end, will I be able to plug my iPod into the sound system and play music for the crowd before the parade starts? We're quite a ways down the route so there's a lot of time to kill before the initial color guard arrives. Thanks. You'll get some kind of noise out of it. But don't wait until the day of performance to find out! Who's providing this equipment? What does he say? Can you hook it up today and experiment? What an appropriate name to be announcing a Waterama! Is that why they chose you? :-) |
#6
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hank wrote:
I would find it worth the trouble and cost to buy a cable with 1/8" stereo plug on one end and dual 1/4 TS plugs And cedriclathan154 wrote: You don't want to run your stereo 1/8" output from your iPod to a mono 1/4" input. It messes up the impedance and could cause damage to the iPod. Good to know, thanks! Laurence asked: What an appropriate name to be announcing a Waterama! Is that why they chose you? :-) Okay, I give up. Why is Rebecca Webb a good name to announce a Waterama parade? The only association I can think of is the watery end met by the title character in the Hitchcock movie... R. ** Posted from http://www.teranews.com ** |
#7
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
wrote ...
You don't want to run your stereo 1/8" output from your iPod to a mono 1/4" input. It messes up the impedance No, it does nothing of the sort. If you don't know what you are talking about, please refrain from disseminating disinformation here. and could cause damage to the iPod. No "impedance" problem will "damage" an iPod. The worst case is to put a dead short across the iPod output, and it doesn't care. Also, if you use a mono 1/8" connector in your stereo input the mono plug is just slightly wider than the stereo plug. Where DO you get all this misinformation? 3.5mm plugs are all the same diameter (i.e. nominal 3.5mm) "Mono" (2-pole) and "stereo" (3-pole) and even 4-pole 3.5mm plugs are all the same diameter. Over time, this can cause the widening of the jack on the iPod and eventually, you won't make contact when you plug in a stereo headphone or other stereo 1/8" connector. You *might* have a problem if you wandered into a museum and found an old 1/8-inch mono earpiece from a 1960s transistor radio. Else, your theory about different sizes and widening the iPod jack are fantasy. |
#8
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Rebecca Webb wrote:
Greetings. I'm going to be announcing the Glenwood Waterama parade for the 5th time on July 26. My area along the parade route covers several blocks, so a sound system with speakers, amplifier, and microphone are provided for my use. The mike is the only item plugged into the amplifier, a device I'm somewhat familiar with from theatre work. The input ports look like simple quarter inch females to me. If I bring an RCA 1/8th inch line and a quarter inch adapter to put on one end, will I be able to plug my iPod into the sound system and play music for the crowd before the parade starts? We're quite a ways down the route so there's a lot of time to kill before the initial color guard arrives. Thanks. RW ** Posted from http://www.teranews.com ** Yes. But don't just roll up on the day and assume it will all work without a trial run! Test it first - you should be fine - but test it to be sure. I assume you also have public performance licence (or whatever the document is called to keep the legal shmeegles happy) for the music you will be playing? Either that, or you composed, arranged and performed it all yourself.... :-) Chris W -- The voice of ignorance speaks loud and long, But the words of the wise are quiet and few. --- |
#9
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Rebecca Webb" wrote ...
And cedriclathan154 wrote: You don't want to run your stereo 1/8" output from your iPod to a mono 1/4" input. It messes up the impedance and could cause damage to the iPod. Good to know, thanks! Alas, it is fundamentally incorrect. There is NO "impedance" issue conecting a low output-imedance source such as an iPod to a high-impedance input such as your 1/4 inch mic input. There MAY be a level mismatch because the iPod likely puts out much more voltage than any mic input is ready for. This MAY overdrive the sound system (and the ears of the people hearing it) Note also that you need to combine the stereo outputs from the iPod into a mono signal to feed into the mic input. This is easiest done with a simply "Y-adapter". |
#10
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.pro
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Chris Whealy wrote: I assume you also have public performance licence (or whatever the document is called to keep the legal shmeegles happy) for the music you will be playing? Either that, or you composed, arranged and performed it all yourself.... Oy. I'd intended to lead off with the locally written and produced "Minnewaska Waltz." Didn't know I was going to have to follow it up with "Minnewaska Polka," "On the Shores of Lake Minnewaska," "Minnewaska Foxtrot"... Thanks, everybody, you're being incredibly helpful! R. ** Posted from http://www.teranews.com ** |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
apple ipod nano mp3 player new in box apple 2gb nano ipod playerapple ipod nano video apple ipod nano player new in us apple ipod nano 2 gbwhite mp3 player new apple ipod nano mp3 player2 black apple ipod nano 4gb mp3player new smallest new nano appl | Pro Audio | |||
yesterday, go display a parade | Car Audio | |||
Slutishness on Parade | Audio Opinions | |||
Cheney's Greed on Parade | Audio Opinions | |||
Chickenhawks on Parade | Audio Opinions |