Inserting things into my nads...

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Not sure what to call this, but it's something that I need just for my desk/computer audio setup. I want to be able to send signal from both the headphones out of my computer, and my CD player to one 'channel' of a NAD 7120 Receiver. I want to be able to have level controll on both, so in reality 4 channels of audio. What I see me needing to do is put diodes on all four signal lines and then pots on them. Is this the right way to go about doing this? I basically want to make a mini-mixer type idea, but don't need all the features such as eq . I'm not sure what this is called or I would have searched. If anyone has done this or knows how to, or knows what I am looking for, I would appreciate it. If you have a schematic or pcb layout, even better.

Thank You,
Cam
 
ctardi said:


You can't run 2 amps into 1 pair of speakers keeping it so that both are mixed in stereo




CD drive is usually being used.


And you can't run 2 sources on a amp.. well you can with a pair of y adapters but this all sounds so retarted and waste of time.. why are you doing this again.. who on earth listens to 2 audio sources at the same time ?
 
It's not that stupid listening to two audio sources, I sometimes used to play games with all sound effects, whilst listening to some appropriate CD music instead of the poor MIDI In-Game music...

You could try it a with two simple stereo potentiometers, and then mix both channels into one... No diodes required. From there on, you can make it as complicated as you want 🙂

The easy-to-buy solution: A small (studio/DJ) mix panel?

Cheers!

Bouke
 
Maybe it's been mentioned, but "y"ing two sources together is not a good idea. There must be a way of at least partly isolating them from each other. Output devices don't take to kindly to being slammed into by another source. There was a great article posted by Masque Sound about that a while back but I can't seem to find it...
 
just build a device with a dpdt for each channel and switch sources by applying power to the relays?
Diodes like that on the input stage would be bad with a ~.6V bias you would only get the peaks of the signal or more likely no signal.....
 
This should do the trick. The 10K resistors pad the headphone level and isolate the two sources. The dual-gang pots will allow you to adjust each source. The headphone signal levels are plenty high enough to drive the aux inputs even after 1/2 voltage division with the R's and Pot's.

I've used this circuit many times to feed a tape or CD headphone output to an audio amplifier. Keep the volume on the headphone source fairly low to prevent distortion.

Happy mixing!
 

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