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Motorglider microphone wiring question



 
 
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  #1  
Old April 25th 14, 05:03 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Paul Remde
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Posts: 1,691
Default Motorglider microphone wiring question

Hi,

I am trying to help a customer out with a motorglider microphone wiring
question. I'm hoping someone here will have a suggestion.

Motorgliders often have both boom microphones and aviation headsets.
Obviously, the headsets are used when the motor is running and the boom
microphones are used when in gliding mode. It wouldn't work well to leave
the boom microphones live when the aviation headsets are in use because they
would pickup the engine noise. How are motorgliders wired so that only the
headset mics are used when the headsets are plugged in?

I suppose that a "boom mic enable" switch could be used to disable the boom
mics when not in use. But I think there is a way to have the boom
microphones disabled by a switch being opened mechanically when the headset
mic plug is plugged into the mic jack. Standard aviation mic jacks don't
have any way to accommodate that. Any suggestions?

The goal is to make it intuitive for the pilot - and reliable.

Best Regards,

Paul Remde

  #2  
Old April 25th 14, 05:35 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Soartech
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Posts: 268
Default Motorglider microphone wiring question

You would have to install a new mike jack with a set of break-on-insertion contacts and run the boom mike through those contacts. Try something like a
Switchcraft L12B available at Mouser or Digikey.
  #3  
Old April 25th 14, 06:20 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Ian[_5_]
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Posts: 5
Default Motorglider microphone wiring question

Are you asking about a motorglider..Grob 109 or similar, or a self launching
sailplane?
If the former, there's some good info in the Grob 109 yahoo group

"Soartech" wrote in message
...

You would have to install a new mike jack with a set of break-on-insertion
contacts and run the boom mike through those contacts. Try something like a
Switchcraft L12B available at Mouser or Digikey.

  #4  
Old April 25th 14, 06:46 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Darryl Ramm
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Posts: 2,403
Default Motorglider microphone wiring question

"Paul Remde" wrote:
Hi,

I am trying to help a customer out with a motorglider microphone wiring
question. I'm hoping someone here will have a suggestion.

Motorgliders often have both boom microphones and aviation headsets.
Obviously, the headsets are used when the motor is running and the boom
microphones are used when in gliding mode. It wouldn't work well to
leave the boom microphones live when the aviation headsets are in use
because they would pickup the engine noise. How are motorgliders wired
so that only the headset mics are used when the headsets are plugged in?

I suppose that a "boom mic enable" switch could be used to disable the
boom mics when not in use. But I think there is a way to have the boom
microphones disabled by a switch being opened mechanically when the
headset mic plug is plugged into the mic jack. Standard aviation mic
jacks don't have any way to accommodate that. Any suggestions?

The goal is to make it intuitive for the pilot - and reliable.

Best Regards,

Paul Remde


Many motorgliders will have a switch to select which mic is used. The pilot
needs to think about how they use their headset and what type it is.
unplugging a cable to deactivate the boom mic is very impractical in many
setups especially if the headset sockets are a little awkward to reach.

Darryl
  #5  
Old April 25th 14, 06:52 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Bryan Searle
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Posts: 15
Default Motorglider microphone wiring question

I had this problem. My solution was to use the radio to switch between
mic's using the menu system. The first one I tried (KR2) was no good - the
boom mic would break through with the engine on. Then I exchanged that for
an ATR833 and this totally suppressed the unused mic. The trick is to wire
the PTT switch to both Left and Right channels and just use the radio to
select Left (headset mic.) or Right (boom mic.)

I believe that DG use a relay that switches automatically with the engine
circuit. A complication ready to fail if you ask me!

Frankly, I rarely use the boom mic, I just put the headset behind the
headrest and use the headset mic. which is possibly better than the dynamic
boom mic because it is noise cancelling by design (the sound from both
sides cancels out). I am tempted to remove the boom mic. because it is in
the way, except that is a back-up....

End of message...

At 16:03 25 April 2014, Paul Remde wrote:
Hi,

I am trying to help a customer out with a motorglider microphone wiring
question. I'm hoping someone here will have a suggestion.

Motorgliders often have both boom microphones and aviation headsets.
Obviously, the headsets are used when the motor is running and the boom
microphones are used when in gliding mode. It wouldn't work well to leave


the boom microphones live when the aviation headsets are in use because
they
would pickup the engine noise. How are motorgliders wired so that only

the

headset mics are used when the headsets are plugged in?

I suppose that a "boom mic enable" switch could be used to disable the

boom

mics when not in use. But I think there is a way to have the boom
microphones disabled by a switch being opened mechanically when the

headset

mic plug is plugged into the mic jack. Standard aviation mic jacks don't


have any way to accommodate that. Any suggestions?

The goal is to make it intuitive for the pilot - and reliable.

Best Regards,

Paul Remde



  #6  
Old April 25th 14, 08:08 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
JS
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Posts: 1,384
Default Motorglider microphone wiring question

I'm amazed that people try to use large headsets in Self-Launch Sailplanes. They are an excellent way to scratch the inside of the canopy. Also something to store when not in use, which is 95% of the time as I recall.
There are many "isolating ear bud" headphones available these days. Examples:

Shure
http://www.shure.com/americas/produc...s/se-earphones

Ultimate Ears
http://www.ultimateears.com/en-us/900s

Ear buds are available from manufacturers or on Amazon, etc. for much less than an aviation headset, and fit in the glider's side pocket.
Install an 1/8" stereo headphone jack and use the same boom mic!
Jim
  #7  
Old April 25th 14, 08:37 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
darrylr
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Posts: 29
Default Motorglider microphone wiring question

On Friday, April 25, 2014 12:08:05 PM UTC-7, JS wrote:
I'm amazed that people try to use large headsets in Self-Launch Sailplanes. They are an excellent way to scratch the inside of the canopy. Also something to store when not in use, which is 95% of the time as I recall.

There are many "isolating ear bud" headphones available these days. Examples:



Shure

http://www.shure.com/americas/produc...s/se-earphones



Ultimate Ears

http://www.ultimateears.com/en-us/900s



Ear buds are available from manufacturers or on Amazon, etc. for much less than an aviation headset, and fit in the glider's side pocket.

Install an 1/8" stereo headphone jack and use the same boom mic!

Jim


Jim

As much as I know it's dangerous to stand in front of a good old rant on r.a.s, but umm nobody said anything about a large aviation headset. For all we know the owner could be using any one of several compact (often in-ear design) aviation headsets with boom microphones. Like the Comfort Aloft brand ones I like.

And these headsets with good canceling mics should have better mics than the typical glider gooseneck mic, but of course those standard mics may work just fine when the engine is running (if people know how to use them properly, ... oops heading off on a rant there...).

Darryl
  #8  
Old April 26th 14, 04:32 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Dave Nadler
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Posts: 1,610
Default Motorglider microphone wiring question

On Friday, April 25, 2014 3:08:05 PM UTC-4, JS wrote:
I'm amazed that people try to use large headsets in Self-Launch Sailplanes.
They are an excellent way to scratch the inside of the canopy. Also
something to store when not in use, which is 95% of the time as I recall.

There are many "isolating ear bud" headphones available these days. Examples:

Shure
http://www.shure.com/americas/produc...s/se-earphones

Ultimate Ears
http://www.ultimateears.com/en-us/900s

Ear buds are available from manufacturers or on Amazon, etc. for much
less than an aviation headset, and fit in the glider's side pocket.

Install an 1/8" stereo headphone jack and use the same boom mic!

Jim


I use a boom mike and a compact headset with no mic.
Of course, my Antares 20E is much quieter than other motorgliders.

One of my friends is very happy using Bose noise-cancelling
non-aviation earbuds in his (louder) ASH-26E with a boom
mic.

Neither of us switch microphones...

Hope that helps,
See ya, Dave "YO electric" (beat by Dick Butler again yesterday)
  #9  
Old April 26th 14, 08:56 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Bryan Searle
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Posts: 15
Default Motorglider microphone wiring question

There is no way that you can use a boom mic with a petrol engine! The
vibration will couple directly through the fuselage attached boom and
produces a huge signal. The use of ear-buds is a great idea, but the cost
is somewhat eye-watering! I just use the cheapest Ebay aviation headset
which will collapse to a reasonable size, unlike the premium headsets.
Anyway, its is very difficult to converse with a self-launching 2 stroke at
+6000rpm just behind your head, however much you pay for a
headset/whatever.


At 19:08 25 April 2014, JS wrote:
I'm amazed that people try to use large headsets in Self-Launch

Sailplanes.
They are an excellent way to scratch the inside of the canopy. Also
something to store when not in use, which is 95% of the time as I recall.
There are many "isolating ear bud" headphones available these days.
Examples:

Shure
http://www.shure.com/americas/produc...s/se-earphones

Ultimate Ears
http://www.ultimateears.com/en-us/900s

Ear buds are available from manufacturers or on Amazon, etc. for much

less
than an aviation headset, and fit in the glider's side pocket.
Install an 1/8" stereo headphone jack and use the same boom mic!
Jim


  #10  
Old April 26th 14, 08:31 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Darryl Ramm
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Posts: 2,403
Default Motorglider microphone wiring question

Bryan Searle wrote:
There is no way that you can use a boom mic with a petrol engine! The
vibration will couple directly through the fuselage attached boom and
produces a huge signal.


Before claiming something won't work you might actually want to check in
with all the folks who manage to do exactly what you are claiming will not
work. And as fun as it might be to think Dave might be wrong about
something he already offered an existence proof that it does work/is being
used. So he's wrong and a liar?

Microphones in motorgliders can be problematic with engine noise, ignition
pickup, increased need for proper microphone technique, etc. But any
blanket claim that a gooseneck microphone cannot work is just plain wrong.

A good quality canceling headset mic may be best but many motorglider
pilots are able to use the factory installed gooseneck mounted microphones
just fine. Dave was talking about a different pilot in an ASH-26E, but my
ASH-26E gooseneck mic is very usable when under power if it is properly
positioned near the mouth.

Darryl
 




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