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| I am looking for a mixer that will have the capability to tolerate high level inputs, (5 watts or so) it will need to be a split supply to avoid ground problems (most radio gear does not use a common ground speaker output) 4-6 inputs will be ok, 1 output, to audio amplifier. Any ideas? | |
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Car radios (presuming you are talking about something like that!) are either single ended outputs (where one side of the speaker is grounded), or bridged outputs (where neither is) - in the second case you could simply use either one of the speaker connections to feed a mixer. It's not a very 'nice' way to feed a mixer, and HiFi buffs will be fainting in their thousands - but you would only need a very crude mixer, with the speaker outputs feeding directly to pots (perhaps even with a series resistor to drop it further), then a simple single opamp mixer. | ||
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| Let me clarify, communications radio gear (two-way) I am building a storm chase vehicle and I just as soon not have a ton of different speakers around, I am planning on using a simple op amp mixer, but I do need to reduce the level to safe limits for the op amp. | |
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Nigel, I am totally drawing a blank, I understand the concept of the virtual earth but the actual doing of it is escaping me. I ahve been out of touch for several years with the electronics hobby, let me try this, as far as full device connections, we have +Vcc, -Vcc and ground (earth) in a dual supply arrangement. I have a intercom schematic that appears to use the virtual ground arrangement (I think) Basically what it is is a system that uses a TL074 quad op-amp, the first op-amp, amplifies the signal coming in, then the second op-amp is used as what appears to me as a unity gain follower, followed toward the output amp with another unity gain follower, at this point the flow also goes to the 4th op-amp which may be a "virtual ground" op-amp I am not sure. If you want I have a gif file of the schematic I can post. Posting it may clear some things up, and I also have a question on converting that circuit to a dual supply. Let me know. | ||
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I would draw you a circuit when I've got time, but there are already loads of mixer circuits out on the web, there's a nice simple example here http://www.zen22142.zen.co.uk/Circuits/Audio/6ipmix.htm, you could easily use that - just ignore the microphone preamps at the top, and duplicate the bottom line inputs. This design gives a gain of about two, you probably don't require that - changing the feedback resistor from 100K to 22K would reduce the gain to about 0.5, you could even replace it with a variable resistor and make the gain variable. | ||
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