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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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Posted to rec.audio.tech,sci.electronics.components,sci.electronics.repair,sci.electronics.basics
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On Mon, 01 May 2006 10:02:35 +0100, Pooh Bear
wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Mon, 01 May 2006 08:38:56 +0100, Pooh Bear wrote: Don Pearce wrote: On Fri, 28 Apr 2006 15:36:00 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Don Pearce wrote: But being a total of approx 13k will have little effect across 150 ohms. True - I was just trying to correct your 1.2k, which while hardly a typo was certainly a slip of the decimal point. No - that's the input impedance of a Neve desk - one of the classic designs. Others too. More modern ones may be higher. One more thing - the Neve mic pre has a pretty poor noise performance. At -128dBu equivalent at the input, that is about 6dB above pure thermal noise. That is 4 or 5 dB more noise than they should be achieving. Please do your sums properly Don before making gaffes like that ! Graham Thank you! I did make a gaffe. No problem, we all goof up from time to time. ;-) The actual figure for the Neve noise figure is about 3dB. That is still unforgivably poor for high end kit - it is in fact no better than my little Behringer. Indeed Ten years ago I was designing satellite receivers working up at 12GHz. The noise figure I was working to was 0.3dB. The last audio preamp I made had a noise figure of about 0.5dB, because I was willing to use multiple parallel discrete transistors for the input circuitry. Care to name which ones you were using ? Yes - I have a box of old MAT-01s from PMI. They are strictly reserved for such projects. I don't know if they are still available. Making it any better than this would have been possible, but unwarranted because unlike the satellite receiver, it wasn't pointing at a cold sky, but a warm microphone. Back in the days when I was at Neve, the then V series ( Mks 1 and 2 ) consoles ( and just about everything else except the digital console ) had a mic pre using a step up transformer and a 5534. The quoted noise for that was a rather poor -126dBu and it didn't actually measure any better either IIRC ! I was somewhat surprised to say the least. The 5534 is not bad, but I wouldn't say it is the quietest way of doing things. I had to make a very small preamp (just one op amp) for a high impedance (50k) microphone. I searched for ages for quiet op amp before I realised that an OP27 is optimized pretty well perfectly at this impedance, with an excess noise of only about 1dB. Amazing! The recent mic pres I've done ( quite economy types ) manage about -128.5 - as long as you factor in the extra little bit to account for the true noise equivalent bandwidth of the measurement set : -3dB @ 22kHz 4th order is about 23kHz NEB. Graham I really wish noise was expressed as a noise figure, rather than a level. That way it wouldn't matter what impedance you were using, you would simply have a figure of merit that told you how much worse the pre was than theoretically perfect. d -- Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
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