Hi there
I want to add a VU meter to a DJ mixer output to a school setup.
Kids use their phones when they're DJ-ing, they're all different levels at max-vol, they don't understand the 'gain', 'master', 'power amp volume' controls and how they interact (though I am working on that!)
The DJ mixer gives out about 1v at a nominal 'max' signal. We want to set the power amp controls and hide them away, and add a VU meter in the DJ box so they just know they can drive the DJ mixer up until it hits about 0DbVU and that's the volume limit we're allowed to operate at. And also 'when the little kids are around we should go fo -3DbVU' or similar. Some visual reference for 'all out party' compared to 'conservative volume' which means no-ones arguing about 'how loud it was last week' etc...
So, it ain't high fidelity. I Just want to add an inline VU meter on the DJ mixer outputs, so the kids can have the gain on max and the master vol on 1 and still know when we are reaching 'the neighbours will complain' threshold by the VU meter. If their high-output phone distorts the DJ mixer then that's for another lesson... All things considered, if its set 'correctly' I'd like it to be a pretty decent transference of signal after the VU meter to the power amp.
So I am gonna buy a couple of eBay VU's, just the meters, and I want to put them in a box with a simple op-amp buffer and a signal input-output that are directly connected. Is that the right way to go? The near-infinite resistance of the op amp in should do next to nothing to the audio signal, I figure. I'll work out power for the backlights, but do I need an amplifier circuit for the VU needles, considering I'll be wanting the 1v output of the mixer to register about ODbVU on the other side of the op amp. In a simplistic approach I feel that 1v on the op amp in should end up being 1v out if setup as a buffer but I know VU's are gonna move by current, not voltage. I've seen various buffered VU circuits that have some kind of current amp to make the meter movement work but I'm not sure if I can use ANYTHING, or if I need to follow a sort of standardised VU meter current amp schematic after the buffer..
Will a meter have a given current that moves the needle to the 0DbVU position, and I have to make an amp that makes 1v give that current to the movement?
Any thoughts?
Thanks in advance, as ever!
I want to add a VU meter to a DJ mixer output to a school setup.
Kids use their phones when they're DJ-ing, they're all different levels at max-vol, they don't understand the 'gain', 'master', 'power amp volume' controls and how they interact (though I am working on that!)
The DJ mixer gives out about 1v at a nominal 'max' signal. We want to set the power amp controls and hide them away, and add a VU meter in the DJ box so they just know they can drive the DJ mixer up until it hits about 0DbVU and that's the volume limit we're allowed to operate at. And also 'when the little kids are around we should go fo -3DbVU' or similar. Some visual reference for 'all out party' compared to 'conservative volume' which means no-ones arguing about 'how loud it was last week' etc...
So, it ain't high fidelity. I Just want to add an inline VU meter on the DJ mixer outputs, so the kids can have the gain on max and the master vol on 1 and still know when we are reaching 'the neighbours will complain' threshold by the VU meter. If their high-output phone distorts the DJ mixer then that's for another lesson... All things considered, if its set 'correctly' I'd like it to be a pretty decent transference of signal after the VU meter to the power amp.
So I am gonna buy a couple of eBay VU's, just the meters, and I want to put them in a box with a simple op-amp buffer and a signal input-output that are directly connected. Is that the right way to go? The near-infinite resistance of the op amp in should do next to nothing to the audio signal, I figure. I'll work out power for the backlights, but do I need an amplifier circuit for the VU needles, considering I'll be wanting the 1v output of the mixer to register about ODbVU on the other side of the op amp. In a simplistic approach I feel that 1v on the op amp in should end up being 1v out if setup as a buffer but I know VU's are gonna move by current, not voltage. I've seen various buffered VU circuits that have some kind of current amp to make the meter movement work but I'm not sure if I can use ANYTHING, or if I need to follow a sort of standardised VU meter current amp schematic after the buffer..
Will a meter have a given current that moves the needle to the 0DbVU position, and I have to make an amp that makes 1v give that current to the movement?
Any thoughts?
Thanks in advance, as ever!
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