Here are the things the manufactuer claims about the Mic Splitter:
Say you are running two mixers at once – perhaps one for the
monitor system and one for the main PA (or one for a broadcast
feed and one for the PA). If a performer wants his/her mic split
into a powered monitor and the PA, you will need the ability to
split the signal from the source so that the signal can go both
ways. It is also important that the output of the source encounters
the right impedance. For example, if you simply used a “Y”
adapter, signal strength and quality would be lost. For this reason,
the SplitCOM professional splitter has a built-in transformer.
Since you may be splitting the balanced output of an instrument
amp or preamp, another consideration is “hum” caused by a
ground loop. The SplitCOM splitter box also features a ground
lift switch to reduce that problem.
I want to split the mic from my isolation cabinet into 2 PA mixers. One mixer will drive a reverb tank, and the other mixer will mix the wet and dry signals together.
I plan to use the Mic Splitter, but I am trying to understand why I need it and how it works.
It seems that the load impedance the mic sees is less no matter what. Assuming the mic has an impedance of 600R, with a Y-adapter, the mic would see 300R impedance, an obvious mismatch, but how does the transformer prevent this from happening?
What are the impedances of the primary and secondary of the transformer?
I understand the lift switch can prevent a ground loop, but is the Output still balanced with the ground lifted? If so, how?
Say you are running two mixers at once – perhaps one for the
monitor system and one for the main PA (or one for a broadcast
feed and one for the PA). If a performer wants his/her mic split
into a powered monitor and the PA, you will need the ability to
split the signal from the source so that the signal can go both
ways. It is also important that the output of the source encounters
the right impedance. For example, if you simply used a “Y”
adapter, signal strength and quality would be lost. For this reason,
the SplitCOM professional splitter has a built-in transformer.
Since you may be splitting the balanced output of an instrument
amp or preamp, another consideration is “hum” caused by a
ground loop. The SplitCOM splitter box also features a ground
lift switch to reduce that problem.
I want to split the mic from my isolation cabinet into 2 PA mixers. One mixer will drive a reverb tank, and the other mixer will mix the wet and dry signals together.
I plan to use the Mic Splitter, but I am trying to understand why I need it and how it works.
It seems that the load impedance the mic sees is less no matter what. Assuming the mic has an impedance of 600R, with a Y-adapter, the mic would see 300R impedance, an obvious mismatch, but how does the transformer prevent this from happening?
What are the impedances of the primary and secondary of the transformer?
I understand the lift switch can prevent a ground loop, but is the Output still balanced with the ground lifted? If so, how?
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