hi guys this is my first post. i ordered a vintage microphone (early 60s) off of ebay and it claimed to be working, but when i received it, ive been getting no signal. i decided i could probably fix it, but with not much experience, i think i need your help
here are a few pictures of the microphone and all of the solder points and junk:
^solder points of the cable that was attached to the mic
^wires from the mic, red and black. that came off of the attached cable (by accident)
^the mic
What i am thinking of doing is getting this:
and somehow wiring the black and red cables from the bottom of the mic to this stereo plug. would this be possible? then i could provide my own TRS cable to plug into my mixer. PLEASE HELP ME GUYS, im a n00b
here are a few pictures of the microphone and all of the solder points and junk:
An externally hosted image should be here but it was not working when we last tested it.
^solder points of the cable that was attached to the mic
An externally hosted image should be here but it was not working when we last tested it.
^wires from the mic, red and black. that came off of the attached cable (by accident)
An externally hosted image should be here but it was not working when we last tested it.
^the mic
What i am thinking of doing is getting this:
An externally hosted image should be here but it was not working when we last tested it.
and somehow wiring the black and red cables from the bottom of the mic to this stereo plug. would this be possible? then i could provide my own TRS cable to plug into my mixer. PLEASE HELP ME GUYS, im a n00b
A different camera that can take close-up photos might help. It's not what I would call a broadcast mic.
It reminds me of the mic on some Ampex 2" VTRs for recording messages on the cue track as service aids.
G²
I'll say G² stands for Good Grief! 2" Ampex VTRs? That's a blast from the past.
Yep, you're gonna need better photos. They don't have to be big, just close and in focus.
Yep it is but here is the scary part. I worked on an AVR-1 on Tuesday, and AVR-2 on Wednesday and I was supposed to work on some AVR-3s on Saturday but I ran out of time. However, that was an unusual week. The employer likes that I can work on the 'legacy' equipment. I'm known there as 'Mr. Capacitor' as most of the failures are caps.
To the OP, does your camera have a macro mode? That would help a lot.
G²
Last edited:
- Status
- This old topic is closed. If you want to reopen this topic, contact a moderator using the "Report Post" button.
- Home
- General Interest
- Everything Else
- Fixing a vintage broadcast microphone HELP!