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Advice requested: wireless microphone for use with laptop
[Apologies for cross-posting to uk.d-i-y but I was advised that there's
a wealth of good people there even though this is an Audio question] Our local junior ice hockey club wants to announce various messages to the gathering masses (all three of them at most games!). I've already plumbed my old laptop in to the Public Address system so we can play appropriate music at the game stoppages. So now my idea is to get a wireless radio microphone of some reasonable quality to feed in to the microphone input of the laptop and thence on out the headphone socket and through the PA (we need wireless because the timekeeper's bench and the DJ area are some 50metres apart). Plumbing through the laptop to use its mixing capabilities. A cheap (£12) radio microphone off Ebay is no use. I've even wired up a quarter-inch jack socket to a 3.5mm jack plug the proper way but it's still no use. (The "proper way" is to ignore the middle ring power connection on the stereo 3.5mm jack for the electret microphones commonly used with laptops. I've done some research here, but am willing to admit my fallibility). I'm looking for advice: Anyone done this before? What impedance microphone should I look for? Any good sources for the kit? The club have a budget up to (I guess) £100 but cannot afford much more for anything sophisticated. Any help appreciated; thanks in advance Mungo |
Advice requested: wireless microphone for use with laptop
"Mungo" wrote in message oups.com... [Apologies for cross-posting to uk.d-i-y but I was advised that there's a wealth of good people there even though this is an Audio question] Our local junior ice hockey club wants to announce various messages to the gathering masses (all three of them at most games!). I've already plumbed my old laptop in to the Public Address system so we can play appropriate music at the game stoppages. So now my idea is to get a wireless radio microphone of some reasonable quality to feed in to the microphone input of the laptop and thence on out the headphone socket and through the PA (we need wireless because the timekeeper's bench and the DJ area are some 50metres apart). Plumbing through the laptop to use its mixing capabilities. A cheap (£12) radio microphone off Ebay is no use. I've even wired up a quarter-inch jack socket to a 3.5mm jack plug the proper way but it's still no use. (The "proper way" is to ignore the middle ring power connection on the stereo 3.5mm jack for the electret microphones commonly used with laptops. I've done some research here, but am willing to admit my fallibility). I'm looking for advice: Anyone done this before? What impedance microphone should I look for? Any good sources for the kit? The club have a budget up to (I guess) £100 but cannot afford much more for anything sophisticated. Any help appreciated; thanks in advance Mungo Sadly, the cheaper wireless microphone systems I've looked at offer a range smaller than you seem to need, typically 30m, maximum 50m. Secondly, the cheaper systems don't provide diversity receivers, which means that you can get considerable fading as the microphone is moved. Thirdly, the cheaper systems operate on fixed frequencies, and you may find that the frequency you are on is already occupied by something else. The better systems offer greater range, selectable channel frequencies and diversity reception, all of which I would suggest you need in your circumstances, but they cost nearer £ 200. Maplin has a system for £180. What didn't work with your existing set-up? It may be possible to fix that. S. |
Advice requested: wireless microphone for use with laptop
On 3 May 2006 05:06:00 -0700, "Mungo" wrote:
[Apologies for cross-posting to uk.d-i-y but I was advised that there's a wealth of good people there even though this is an Audio question] Our local junior ice hockey club wants to announce various messages to the gathering masses (all three of them at most games!). I've already plumbed my old laptop in to the Public Address system so we can play appropriate music at the game stoppages. So now my idea is to get a wireless radio microphone of some reasonable quality to feed in to the microphone input of the laptop and thence on out the headphone socket and through the PA (we need wireless because the timekeeper's bench and the DJ area are some 50metres apart). Plumbing through the laptop to use its mixing capabilities. Don't mix through the laptop. Buy a little Behringer mixer and use that. The price is so low it's a no-brainer. |
Advice requested: wireless microphone for use with laptop
On Wed, 3 May 2006 13:30:30 +0100, Serge Auckland wrote:
So now my idea is to get a wireless radio microphone of some reasonable quality to feed in to the microphone input of the laptop and thence on out the headphone socket and through the PA (we need wireless because the timekeeper's bench and the DJ area are some 50metres apart). Plumbing through the laptop to use its mixing capabilities. Well, you could use a new Bluetooth dongle that supports high quality headphones. This will also give you the ability to input audio from the headphone microphone on a high quality audio headset. I'm using a Motorola headphone for a similar application. If you're using a PC then the headset simply shows up as yet another audio input device and you can simply select "Bluetooth Audio" as the input source. If you *don't* want to use a headset, there are Bluetooth boxes which take input via 3.5mm jack and route it over Bluetooth. The only problem with the ones I've seen is that they are line level input, not intended for use with microphones. |
Advice requested: wireless microphone for use with laptop
On Wed, 03 May 2006 14:06:45 +0100, Laurence Payne wrote:
Don't mix through the laptop. Buy a little Behringer mixer and use that. The price is so low it's a no-brainer. Agreed, trying to do this with a PC isn't all the sensible, let alone a laptop. By all means still use it as a source for the music but a cheap CD player may well be more reliable and almost anybody can operate a CD player. What happens if you can't make a match, are you going to lend your laptop to someone? If you do will they be able to use it and get it working if it misbehaves? As for a cable, yes reliable if the cable route doesn't cross an entrance onto the ice unprotected and no problem of 50m provided it is balanced. Think of the FX mics around a football pitch, probably on the end of several hundred metres of cable by the time it gets to the OB truck ouside the ground. I suspect the mic is required at both places and radio does give you the freedom to wander from Sin Bin to Sin Bin, into the punters, out onto the ice for presentations etc. Draging a cable with even half a dozen people in the way is a PITA not to mention unsafe. What to look for in a radio mic is true diversity reception, decent battery life, and power output (but watch for marketing hype). I'm not sure if any of the "licence free" ones will have more than one frequency available. Make it a condition of sale that if it turns out that the church down next door also uses the same frequency that you can return it for a full refund. -- Cheers Dave. pam is missing e-mail |
Advice requested: wireless microphone for use with laptop
In article .com,
Mungo wrote: The club have a budget up to (I guess) £100 but cannot afford much more for anything sophisticated. I've had a few replies from my colleagues in the business, and the general consensus is you'll have to have a fund raising event. About 350 is nearer the mark for something reliable and reasonably bomb proof. It's not a matter of sophistication but merely performance. -- *I can see your point, but I still think you're full of ****. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Advice requested: wireless microphone for use with laptop
On Wed, 03 May 2006 16:43:18 +0100 (BST), Dave Liquorice wrote:
What to look for in a radio mic is true diversity reception, decent battery life, and power output (but watch for marketing hype). I'm not sure if any of the "licence free" ones will have more than one frequency available. Make it a condition of sale that if it turns out that the church down next door also uses the same frequency that you can return it for a full refund. Alternatively, use Bluetooth, get 100m range, and you don't have to worry. |
Advice requested: wireless microphone for use with laptop
On Wed, 03 May 2006 16:43:18 +0100 (BST), "Dave Liquorice"
wrote: Think of the FX mics around a football pitch, probably on the end of several hundred metres of cable by the time it gets to the OB truck Radio mics, surely? Just as it's a long time since I saw the roving interviewer and his camera dragging a cable behind him? Maybe things are less developed in America :-) |
Advice requested: wireless microphone for use with laptop
In article ,
Laurence Payne lpayneNOSPAM@dslDOTpipexDOTcom wrote: Think of the FX mics around a football pitch, probably on the end of several hundred metres of cable by the time it gets to the OB truck Radio mics, surely? Just as it's a long time since I saw the roving interviewer and his camera dragging a cable behind him? Maybe things are less developed in America :-) No - fx mics will usually be cabled. Remember many if not most football grounds in the UK have at least some broadcasting cabling installed permanently. As do racecourses. If an FX mic has to be suspended above spectators it would need a rope etc if a radio, so why not just use a cabled mic for this purpose? Most sensible sound men only use radios when necessary. ;-) -- *Growing old is inevitable, growing up is optional * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Advice requested: wireless microphone for use with laptop
On Wed, 03 May 2006 21:09:08 +0100, Laurence Payne wrote:
Think of the FX mics around a football pitch, probably on the end of several hundred metres of cable by the time it gets to the OB truck Radio mics, surely? No, a football pitch (UK meaning) normally has 12 FX mics placed around it. Getting 12 radio mics to work together without interference is not that simple. It can be done but the effort required means it is only done when it has to be. Getting reliable coverage from the perimeter of a football might be an issue as well, the are mics low down possibly close and behind metal advertising boards. Then there is the cost, you'd be looking at doubling or, much more likely, tripling the capital cost. Oh sound quality, top end radio mics are very good these days but they still can't handle large dynamic ranges very well. Football crowds and stadium PAs have a fairly huge dynamic range. I can't see any real gain over using cables. -- Cheers Dave. pam is missing e-mail |
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