If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Wiring diagram for mic?
Would anyone be kind enough to point me to a wiring
diagram for a general aviation radio? I need to know the pinout configurations and voltage for the mic connection. Thank you and regards in advace! Gary |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Wiring diagram for mic?
In article ,
Gary G wrote: Would anyone be kind enough to point me to a wiring diagram for a general aviation radio? I need to know the pinout configurations and voltage for the mic connection. Thank you and regards in advace! Gary There is VERY low voltage involved -- #22 AWG (shielded) wire will suffice. There are three hookups to the jack: Mike Key, Mike Audio and Mike Ring. Ring goes to Ground Key goes to a switch, which grounds the key circuit. This activates the transmit relay in the radio. Mike Audio passes straight through to the radio audio circuit and carries the voice. This wire should be shielded, to reduce EM interference. IIRC, the audio is the tip of the jack; the key is the next position on the jack. Ground is the outer (long) part of the jack. Check with a circuit tester. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Wiring diagram for mic?
Orval Fairbairn wrote: IIRC, the audio is the tip of the jack; the key is the next position on the jack. Ground is the outer (long) part of the jack. Check with a circuit tester. Good post, Orval, but I need to chime in. Mic Key/PTT is the tip. By "grounding" the tip, the radio opens the transmit circuit. The next ring is audio, and the long shaft is ground. When I modified an existing headset to have a PTT on the right earcup, I had to connect a wire from the .206" plug tip to the switch, which then connected to a ground source inside the headset. Dave |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Wiring diagram for mic?
Not quite, Orval. From the leading edge of the male connector (microphone
end as opposed to the aircraft end) the sections of the plug are tip, ring, and shell. Grounding the tip places the transceiver in the transmit mode; ungrounding it (open) leaves the transceiver in the receive mode. The ring carries the microphone audio (more later). The shell is airframe or chassis ground. The mic audio line coming from the transceiver is a current source that is intended to provide a 300 ohm mic element with about 10 mA. Generally this is a simple resistor fed from a quiet regulated supply inside the transceiver. I usually use the +10 volt supply and a 680 ohm resistor. The microphone circuit is designed to emulate a carbon microphone (variable resistance with audio) and will give somewhere between half a volt and a volt peak to peak with normal mic audio. Jim "Orval Fairbairn" wrote in message news In article , Gary G wrote: There is VERY low voltage involved -- #22 AWG (shielded) wire will suffice. There are three hookups to the jack: Mike Key, Mike Audio and Mike Ring. Ring goes to Ground Key goes to a switch, which grounds the key circuit. This activates the transmit relay in the radio. Mike Audio passes straight through to the radio audio circuit and carries the voice. This wire should be shielded, to reduce EM interference. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Wiring diagram for mic?
In article ,
"RST Engineering" wrote: Not quite, Orval. From the leading edge of the male connector (microphone end as opposed to the aircraft end) the sections of the plug are tip, ring, and shell. Grounding the tip places the transceiver in the transmit mode; ungrounding it (open) leaves the transceiver in the receive mode. The ring carries the microphone audio (more later). The shell is airframe or chassis ground. The mic audio line coming from the transceiver is a current source that is intended to provide a 300 ohm mic element with about 10 mA. Generally this is a simple resistor fed from a quiet regulated supply inside the transceiver. I usually use the +10 volt supply and a 680 ohm resistor. The microphone circuit is designed to emulate a carbon microphone (variable resistance with audio) and will give somewhere between half a volt and a volt peak to peak with normal mic audio. I stand corrected. Thank you, Jim and Dave. I was trying to recall from memory -- obviously, it has been awhile. They say that memory is the second thing to go -- I forget what the first is. :) BTW, some mikes have a dual switch -- one that closes both the audio and key circuits, but not headsets. "Orval Fairbairn" wrote in message news In article , Gary G wrote: There is VERY low voltage involved -- #22 AWG (shielded) wire will suffice. There are three hookups to the jack: Mike Key, Mike Audio and Mike Ring. Ring goes to Ground Key goes to a switch, which grounds the key circuit. This activates the transmit relay in the radio. Mike Audio passes straight through to the radio audio circuit and carries the voice. This wire should be shielded, to reduce EM interference. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Wiring diagram for mic?
AWESOME! Thank you.
Of course - I apperently "SPAMMED" everyone to get this because it was in more than one group - places where other people might check and not check this one. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Wiring diagram for GA radio/mic? | Gary G | General Aviation | 15 | November 23rd 05 03:33 PM |
Wiring diagram for GA mic | Gary G | Piloting | 0 | November 2nd 05 01:15 PM |
LX1000 Wiring Diagram | Luke Roberts | Soaring | 2 | April 18th 05 09:26 AM |
ball 101A wiring diagram | coneil | Soaring | 4 | June 22nd 04 06:55 AM |
King KMA-26 Wiring Diagram | Keith Dobbins | General Aviation | 0 | August 23rd 03 04:03 AM |