D-104, only slightly OT

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D-104, only slightly OT

ng3v
Good morning,
 
I have an old D-104 that worked fine when last used (1977) and want to use
it with the K2.
 
I know I could replace the element with one from Heil, but I would prefer to
keep it as original as possible (it does have the preamp in the G stand
base).
 
I will assume the preamp works, and I know the K2 works, but I'm not so sure
about the original element in the mic.  
 
Does anyone know a way to test the element before wiring it up?
 
Thanks es 73,
 
Tom, NG3V

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Re: D-104, only slightly OT

David Pratt
The D-104 is an excellent microphone for the K2 (and K3), Tom.  Because
the ceramic/crystal element is high impedance, your best way of testing
it is to wire it up and try it.  The pre-set gain control will need to
turned fairly well down.

Connect it to the 8-way plug:
                WHITE (or CLEAR) to pin 1 (audio)
                RED to pin 2 (press to talk)
                SCREEN to pin 7 (ground)

73

David G4DMP

In a recent message, NG3V <[hidden email]> writes

>I have an old D-104 that worked fine when last used (1977) and want to use
>it with the K2.
>
>I know I could replace the element with one from Heil, but I would prefer to
>keep it as original as possible (it does have the preamp in the G stand
>base).
>
>I will assume the preamp works, and I know the K2 works, but I'm not so sure
>about the original element in the mic.
>
>Does anyone know a way to test the element before wiring it up?
--
David G4DMP
Leeds, England, UK


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Re: D-104, only slightly OT

P.B. Christensen
In reply to this post by ng3v
> I know I could replace the element with one from Heil, but I would prefer
> to
> keep it as original as possible (it does have the preamp in the G stand
> base).

Tom,

Odds are the crystal element is still in good shape, provided it has not
been subjected to a high humidity environment over an extended period of
time.

Also, anyone contemplating the use of the D-104 with the stock Astatic amp
should consider an alternative buffer amp.  The input Z to Astatic's 2-stage
preamp calculates to 470K-ohm -- way too low for a crystal cartridge.  The
crystal cartridge should see a termination of no less than 5 megohm, and
preferably greater than 10 megohm in order to preserve reasonable low-end
response.

The series capacitance from a typical crystal cartridge is anywhere from
800pF to 1600 pF.  Calculate the - 3dB turnover point into various
terminating resistive values and you'll see why it's important to completely
unload the crystal cartridge.

For simplicity and excellent performance, I favor a single transistor JFET,
configured as a near unity-gain source-follower.  The web is full of FET and
op-amp designs for the D-104, but nearly all of them suffer from inadequate
design, particularly with respect to crystal cartridge loading.  Most
designs I've seen attempt to bias the FET as the analog of a "grid leak"
resistor used on a vacuum tube grid.  As a source follower, the FET is
completely self-biased when the correct source resistor value is used.

The D-104 crystal cartridge can be attached right to the FET's gate with no
other components necessary.  For isolation, I add a 5-meg resistor in series
with the gate, but this is not strictly necessary.  If gate failure is a
concern from static electricity, some ops have used a 10-megohm resistor
from the gate to ground in an attempt to bleed static build-up..  I've never
found this to be necessary.

If all of the above sounds like too much work, simply insert a 10-megohm
resistor between the D-104 cartridge and Astatic's 2-stage preamp.  Signal
to noise and distortion performance will suffer, but at least the cartridge
will be unloaded.  The Astatic preamp can more than compensate for the loss
in level owing to the use of the series resistor.

When the K3 is configured for ESSB transmit, the D-104 will sound nearly as
good as an expensive studio condenser or dynamic mic.  As a final footnote,
I recommend ESSB only for use on uncrowded bands, and when signal strength
is high.  Otherwise, it's a waste of occupied bandwidth.

Paul, W9AC

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Re: D-104, only slightly OT

AC7AC
In reply to this post by ng3v
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Re: D-104, only slightly OT

AC7AC
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Re: D-104, only slightly OT

P.B. Christensen
In reply to this post by AC7AC
> "The Astatic D-104 was designed as a *communications* microphone with a
carefully shaped frequency response for speech and not for extreme high or
low frequency response."

Although the presence rise was a design attribute of the mic, limited
low-end response was not.  The D-104 was produced in the early 1930s as a
communications microphone intended for reasonably good, balanced audio
response in the AM mode -- not SSB.  SSB as used in radio communications is
a post D-104 phenomenon.  Use of the D-104 pre-dates common SSB use in the
amateur service by 20 years.

According to Astatic, their 2-stage buffer amp was designed as an active
impedance transformer as low-Z solid-state devices were being ushered-in
during the 60s   Astatic never intended for the preamp to be used as a
"power mic" device.  It was the Citizen's Band operators who made the added
gain function popular.  That said, Astatic could have designed a much better
buffer for the D-104.

> "The graph of the audio response published by Astatic, using the built in
amplifier, shows 0 dB at 1 kHz. Below  1 kHz the output drops off smoothly
to -5 dB at about 200 Hz, then more steeply down  to -10 dB at 100 Hz where
the published curve ends."

The typical D-104 with 2-stage preamp is substantially more response limited
than that shown in Astatic's graph.   The response plot shown in their
instruction sheet is hardly a scientific measurement and the response can
vary considerably across cartridges.

> "That roll-off is important since excessive low frequency response robs a
signal of intelligibility and "punch" since the bulk of the energy, but
virtually none of the modulation in the spoken voice is down in those
ranges."

True of weak signal communications.  Not true when the SNR is high - and the
reason for the disclaimer at the end of my post.  If your theory is correct,
I doubt Elecraft would have included ESSB as a design feature into the K3,
The lowest fundamental of the deepest male voice can be measured as low as
70 Hz -- and is typically 75-85 Hz.  It's not that spoken voice does not
produce frequencies that low, it's that historically, SSB transmissions have
been deliberately bandwidth-limited.

> "That rising characteristic to a peak in the roughly middle point of the
speech audio spectrum is what made it so effective in communications and
made it so popular."

The D-104 became popular for a variety of reasons including cost,
aesthetics, availability in the golden age of AM, reasonably good and
balanced frequency response, etc.

Paul, W9AC

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RTTY

Merv Schweigert
In reply to this post by P.B. Christensen
Not much of a RTTY person,  but have had several requests for
RTTY qsos for the Triple Play LOTW award going on,  so today
I had a request,  got the manual out and in a few minutes had RTTY
perking along just fine.   Quite a relief after having to have interfaces
and computer hooked up etc.  Worked quite well.  Thanks Elecraft.

I seem to remember some thead about the length of the diddle after
the qso is over,  is there a way to shorten that up.  dont need all that
time in transmit between qsos.   Something I did not see in the
manual?

Thanks  73 Merv KH7C  K3 2306
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Re: D-104, only slightly OT

w2bvh
In reply to this post by P.B. Christensen
I've been using the setup you describe with a K-2 for about 10 years
without problems. In fact I've gotten a few unsolicited compliments on
audio over the years. Mine is wired just like David Pratt described.  I
have the K-2 set for SSBA-1 (attenuator in) and the mic gain pot about
half way up. I just turn up the pot until  1 ALC  led blinks a bit on
voice peaks.

To test, hook it up and ask a friend how it sounds!

73,
Lenny W2BVH


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Re: D-104, only slightly OT - Redux

ng3v
To all who took the time to reply - Thank You.

I've been wanting to do this since I finished the K2 but have never gotten
around to it.  

I bought the Heil desk mic and classic stand with the K2 and I guess I'll
have to sell it now to force my own hand.

73,

Tom

-----Original Message-----
From: [hidden email]
[mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of w2bvh
Sent: Tuesday, January 20, 2009 4:52 PM
To: [hidden email]
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] D-104, only slightly OT

I've been using the setup you describe with a K-2 for about 10 years without
problems. In fact I've gotten a few unsolicited compliments on audio over
the years. Mine is wired just like David Pratt described.  I have the K-2
set for SSBA-1 (attenuator in) and the mic gain pot about half way up. I
just turn up the pot until  1 ALC  led blinks a bit on voice peaks.

To test, hook it up and ask a friend how it sounds!

73,
Lenny W2BVH


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Re: RTTY

wayne burdick
Administrator
In reply to this post by Merv Schweigert
Sending "..--" truncates the usual 4-second idle time to 1 second or
so. I think of it as an "IM" prosign, for "IMmediately stop sending."

Have fun!

73,
Wayne
N6KR

On Jan 20, 2009, at 11:46 AM, Merv Schweigert wrote:

>
> I seem to remember some thead about the length of the diddle after
> the qso is over,  is there a way to shorten that up.  dont need all
> that
> time in transmit between qsos.   Something I did not see in the
> manual?
>


---

http://www.elecraft.com

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