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We installed a new Micro Air in a sailplane. This is the 5th one we
have installed. All have worked great except this last one receives perfectly, but when transmitting it sounds garbled. The boom mic is a Micro Air. Anyone have an idea what this could be? Thanks Kurt |
#2
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Do you have enough power delivered to the radio?
There are two privately owned ships in our club with Microair's. Mine is one. Sometimes, my transmissions were garbled, so I was told. Also, the other ship's transmissions were garbled. Both of us had our panels rewired by a professional avionics shop ('Sparkchasers' located at KJNX, Johnston County Airport, North Carolina, USA). Since doing so, I have not heard of any complaints about my transmissions and my friend's transmissions from his Microair are nice and clear now. BUT, that's not all of the story. Our two club ships had Microairs. 'Had' is the operative word here. I think each radio was sent back to Oz once and maybe twice. While not 'professionally' wired, the ships were 'competently' wired (as opposed to mine, that was originally wired by me....bad mistake!) It just seems that some Microairs work and some, well, maybe don't. I'm currently happy with mine. Ray Lovinggood Carrboro, North Carolina, USA At 02:42 05 June 2007, wrote: We installed a new Micro Air in a sailplane. This is the 5th one we have installed. All have worked great except this last one receives perfectly, but when transmitting it sounds garbled. The boom mic is a Micro Air. Anyone have an idea what this could be? Thanks Kurt |
#3
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Mine had the same problem when first installed. There was too great a
voltage drop using the old wiring through the glider's master power switch. Once I bypassed this switch, the unit worked very well. Of course, I didn't discover this until I had rewired the unit a second time, thinking I must have made some mistake on the first attempt. wrote: We installed a new Micro Air in a sailplane. This is the 5th one we have installed. All have worked great except this last one receives perfectly, but when transmitting it sounds garbled. The boom mic is a Micro Air. Anyone have an idea what this could be? Thanks Kurt |
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On Jun 4, 7:37 pm, wrote:
We installed a new Micro Air in a sailplane. This is the 5th one we have installed. All have worked great except this last one receives perfectly, but when transmitting it sounds garbled. The boom mic is a Micro Air. Anyone have an idea what this could be? Thanks Kurt One other possibility is a bad microphone. I bought an XCOM and the boom mic which is the same microphone as Microair where the core of the microphone was bad. No amount of adjusting the gain or any other normal adjustments woud fix it. The XCOM engineers and Paul Remde at Cumulus Soaring sorted it out and replaced it with a new one and the problem was solved. They also grounded the shield of the microphone cable right at the mount and at the radio end which helped with the "noise" level in the line. Tom |
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On Jun 5, 9:42 am, Discus 44 wrote:
On Jun 4, 7:37 pm, wrote: We installed a new Micro Air in a sailplane. This is the 5th one we have installed. All have worked great except this last one receives perfectly, but when transmitting it sounds garbled. The boom mic is a Micro Air. Anyone have an idea what this could be? Thanks Kurt One other possibility is a bad microphone. I bought an XCOM and the boom mic which is the same microphone as Microair where the core of the microphone was bad. No amount of adjusting the gain or any other normal adjustments woud fix it. The XCOM engineers and Paul Remde at Cumulus Soaring sorted it out and replaced it with a new one and the problem was solved. They also grounded the shield of the microphone cable right at the mount and at the radio end which helped with the "noise" level in the line. Tom Thnaks for all the advice! Kurt |
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I have just received my Microair 760 back from repair by Rick Lord at
Erie Aviation. It too had garbled transmissions. Had the opportunity to use it on Saturday and the reviews are in. "It sounds like you are in a radio studio." "The transmission has fidelity! More base response than an AM radio." "Loud AND clear." Apparently it had a faulty ground and poor FM shielding. I have no idea what that means but Rick Lord is a radio wizard and the fix was inexpensive with a turn-around time of less than a week. ( I also replaced the original electret mic with an Amplified Dynamic mic. I thought I try that before sending the unit in but it didn't help the garbling. It probably helps with the "fidelity"). My 2 Cents Gene |
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