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View Full Version : PA-400 3BL Portable 4 Place Intercom, problems with PTT


Greg Kettmann
May 14th 07, 05:51 AM
The airplane I fly (Mooney M20C) has a two place intercom. I have a
Pilot PA-400 3BL portable 4 place intercom, to allow 4 headsets to be
connected. I bought it used and don't have a manual. So, first, does
anyone know where I can find a copy of the manual, either for purchase
or online?

It worked beautifully for awhile but a problem has developed. It was
intermittent but always fails now. It used to be that you could plug it
in again (and again) and it would work. When I plug the units
microphone plug into the pilot side (it's OK on the co-pilot side) it
keys the microphone as if the PTT had been pushed.

The Intercom has a pigtail with standard headset and microphone plugs on
it. These plug into the usual jacks on the panel, then you plug the
headsets into the box, which has labeled jacks (pilot, co-pilot,
passengers). There is nothing on the box to activate the push to talk,
which is still handled by the PTT switch on the control yoke. However,
as mentioned, when I plug the unit in (no headsets, either on or off, no
changes of switches changes anything) the T comes on in the radio
indicating the mike has been keyed.

Another thing I don't understand... On the intercom microphone plug (on
the pigtail - plugged into the panel) there are two jacks on the back
for pilot and copilot. So, you've got a plug with two jacks on the
back, one jack labeled pilot and the other co-pilot. These make no
sense to me since a typical headset only has about 6 inches of available
cord between the microphone plug and the headset plug and there's no way
to make the microphone plug reach that far away from the headset plug.
The intercom box has a 6 foot cord on it (or so). I'm inclined to
remove this and connect a microphone jack directly, but don't want to do
so without knowing the function of the two plugs.

Thank you for any help. My understanding, from a google search, is that
to key the mike (PTT) the tip of the microphone plug is brought to
ground. This leaves the middle portion or band to carry the microphone
signal and the long portion is ground. Is this correct? What does the
circuit look like, particularly with a pilot and co-pilot, each with
their own PTT.

Thank you for any clarification. GGK

May 14th 07, 08:06 AM
Greg Kettmann > wrote:
> I have a Pilot PA-400 3BL portable 4 place intercom, to allow 4 headsets
> to be connected. I bought it used and don't have a manual. So, first,
> does anyone know where I can find a copy of the manual, either for
> purchase or online?

A little Googling leads to http://www.pilot-usa.com/ , and going to
their "intercoms" page yields
http://www.pilot-usa.com/pdf/DownloadPA400ST.pdf . That manual is for a
slightly different version but may be helpful.

> It used to be that you could plug it in again (and again) and it would
> work. When I plug the units microphone plug into the pilot side (it's
> OK on the co-pilot side) it keys the microphone as if the PTT had been
> pushed.

What happens if you plug in a headset directly to the pilot or co-pilot
jacks on the panel, without the intercom connected to anything? Does
everything work as expected then, or does one side still act differently
than the other? Basically you're trying to find out if the problem
always stays on the pilot's side or not. If it does stay on the pilot's
side, that tends to point towards a problem with the jacks or wiring in
the panel. If it moves around, that tends to point to whichever device
the problem follows.

> Another thing I don't understand... On the intercom microphone plug (on
> the pigtail - plugged into the panel) there are two jacks on the back
> for pilot and copilot.

The PDF above (section 4.2) seems to say that these two jacks are for
remote PTT switches.

Matt Roberds

Greg Kettmann
May 14th 07, 01:25 PM
Thank you Matt.

I'm somewhat embarrassed that you were able to find that manual and I
wasn't, but thank you very much, that's very helpful.

Yes, it appears the funny microphone plug, with what they call a
Y-connector, is for two remote PTT's. Thus removing that feature might
be an effective way to fix this, or at least remove it as a possibility.
I strongly suspect that the problem is in that Y-Connector, based on
this information.

Normal headsets work just fine. The problem is only encountered when
the 4-place intercom is connected to the pilot side.

Thanks again and happy flying. GGK

wrote:
> Greg Kettmann > wrote:
>> I have a Pilot PA-400 3BL portable 4 place intercom, to allow 4 headsets
>> to be connected. I bought it used and don't have a manual. So, first,
>> does anyone know where I can find a copy of the manual, either for
>> purchase or online?
>
> A little Googling leads to http://www.pilot-usa.com/ , and going to
> their "intercoms" page yields
> http://www.pilot-usa.com/pdf/DownloadPA400ST.pdf . That manual is for a
> slightly different version but may be helpful.
>
>> It used to be that you could plug it in again (and again) and it would
>> work. When I plug the units microphone plug into the pilot side (it's
>> OK on the co-pilot side) it keys the microphone as if the PTT had been
>> pushed.
>
> What happens if you plug in a headset directly to the pilot or co-pilot
> jacks on the panel, without the intercom connected to anything? Does
> everything work as expected then, or does one side still act differently
> than the other? Basically you're trying to find out if the problem
> always stays on the pilot's side or not. If it does stay on the pilot's
> side, that tends to point towards a problem with the jacks or wiring in
> the panel. If it moves around, that tends to point to whichever device
> the problem follows.
>
>> Another thing I don't understand... On the intercom microphone plug (on
>> the pigtail - plugged into the panel) there are two jacks on the back
>> for pilot and copilot.
>
> The PDF above (section 4.2) seems to say that these two jacks are for
> remote PTT switches.
>
> Matt Roberds
>

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