Jim,
Thanks for the reply. I had known that Al Kahn had founded
Electro-Voice. I wish I had the chance to talk with him. My dad was a
huge electro-voice fan and he and his best friend from High School, Bart
Locanthy, had both designed and built their own sound systems, starting
back then. . When Bart Locanthy (of JBL and Pioneer) came to visit
after Dad had completed his last speaker enclosures, Dad was like a
little kid because Locanthy just sat in the chair and smiled. Talk
about hams being taken up by their hobby.
Anyway, Yes I like my Jupiter a lot. And I do get complements on my
audio using a Shure 444 but only after playing with the levels and
balance until I got it right, to me at least. I am in quandary
regarding mikes. I like the 444 and do get great reports on my audio.
I also have a HCL-4 element mounted in an unknown mike. I have gotten
good reports with that mike when I was using it on my Kenwood but have
not yet rewired it for the Jupiter. After operating in several venues
with headset and mike combos, including W1AW in Newington, and during
Field Day, that also sounds good, so to speak.. What can I say. What
else can I do. I plan to re-plug (more properly) the HCL-4 mike,
consider the new Heil cartridge, and probably get the Yamaha headset.
THEN I can decide what works best for me. Thank you for your suggestions.
73,
John / WA1JG
On 12/9/2011 1:51 AM, Jim Brown wrote:
> On 12/8/2011 12:48 PM, John wrote:
>> I have been considering the Yamaha Headset. Any experience with the
>> Jupiter? My thinking is that a headset and a foot switch (already
>> working) would be more convenient than dragging around the desk mike
>> as I do now?
> Sorry, I sold my last Ten Tec transceiver several years ago (but still
> use Titans and a Herc II). Ten Tec's audio inputs have always been
> pretty good -- remember that Al Kahn, the engineer who founded the
> company did so with his returns from the sale of Electro-Voice, one of
> the finest pro microphone and loudspeaker companies on the planet at the
> time. In general, just about any decent mic will work just fine with any
> Ten Tec rig I've seen with the exception of a BALANCED professional
> electret mic, which can't easily be made to work with ANY unbalanced
> inputs.
>
> So I'd say, by all means go ahead, following the guidelines in my Ham
> Interfacing Power Point slides. And while there has been discussion of
> using a pad (resistive attenuator), I'd be very surprised if it is
> needed. It was NOT needed with an FT1000MP, which has a very sensitive
> mic input, and had be turned very close to zero with a CM500. But when I
> did that for testing with a very good engineer and serious contester
> listening only three miles away, he gave me a clean bill of health.
>
> One other VERY important point. With any mic like this, it's good to
> keep it away from your mouth to avoid breath pops and bass boost. That
> spacing will also reduce the need for a pad. I wear mine with the mic
> about 2 inches above and 2 inches to the side of my mouth. Sound-wise it
> would be fine at that spacing below the mouth, but you can't munch or
> drink coffee with the mic down there, so I settled on the high and to
> the side position. :)
>
> 73, Jim K9YC
> _______________________________________________
> TenTec mailing list
> TenTec@contesting.com
> http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/tentec
>
_______________________________________________
TenTec mailing list
TenTec@contesting.com
http://lists.contesting.com/mailman/listinfo/tentec
|