Difference between revisions of "Microphone and Line Input"
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When a microphone picks up an acoustic sound wave, it generates a very small voltage waveform which is measured in microvolts. | When a microphone picks up an acoustic sound wave, it generates a very small voltage waveform which is measured in microvolts. | ||
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+ | == Conversion == | ||
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+ | You do not convert a microphone level signal to a line level signal. You simply amplify the microphone level signal with a preamplifier until it is at line level. However, under some circumstances an individual may find the need to feed a line level signal into a microphone level input because the device, such as a radio transmitter, has no other input options. Directly feeding line level into such an input will damage the internal electronics because an already amplified signal level will be fed directly to a preamplifier. If nothing is damaged, the resulting audio will be extremely over-modulated and distorted. | ||
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+ | The line level signal needs to be reduced and impedance matched to send it to the microphone input of such a device. This will come with a cost. There will be a reduction in quality and impedance matching may be tricky. | ||
[[Category:Electronics]] | [[Category:Electronics]] |
Revision as of 21:39, 12 February 2016
In the audio world there are actually four different signal levels that are relevant. The two most discussed in regards to input are line level input and microphone input. First, lets take a look at all four:
- microphone level - weaker audio level than line, such as that from a microphone
- instrument level - weaker audio level than line, such as that from instrument pickups
- line level - used to interconnect audio components
- speaker level - an amplified audio signal for headphones and speakers
Microphone and instrument level audio is weaker than line level. The signal strength can refer to voltage and impedance to produce output power.
Line Level
The line level jacks on consumer electronics are typically unbalanced accepting a TRS Phono Plug. Unlike the weak signal from a microphone, a line level signal is at the highest signal level before final amplification and output to speakers. Consumer line level is rated around -10dBV while there is a different level for professional studio equipment. The most common nominal level for professional equipment is +4 dBu. A line level describes a line's nominal signal level as a ratio, expressed in decibels, against a standard reference voltage.
You never want to send a line level signal to the microphone input of an audio device.
Microphone Level
After the microphone level input goes into an audio device it goes through a preamplifier to boost the signal up to line level. Instrument level input is also very weak, however, may have more variance than that from a microphone. Both will be increased by a preamp prior to mixing or further amplification.
When a microphone picks up an acoustic sound wave, it generates a very small voltage waveform which is measured in microvolts.
Conversion
You do not convert a microphone level signal to a line level signal. You simply amplify the microphone level signal with a preamplifier until it is at line level. However, under some circumstances an individual may find the need to feed a line level signal into a microphone level input because the device, such as a radio transmitter, has no other input options. Directly feeding line level into such an input will damage the internal electronics because an already amplified signal level will be fed directly to a preamplifier. If nothing is damaged, the resulting audio will be extremely over-modulated and distorted.
The line level signal needs to be reduced and impedance matched to send it to the microphone input of such a device. This will come with a cost. There will be a reduction in quality and impedance matching may be tricky.