Maker Pro
Maker Pro

Carbon microphone amplitude

R

Rune D. Jørgensen

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi.

I'm building a microphone amplifier and filter for a communication system
for my motorcycle. I'm filtering away frequencies below 1KHz to suppress
wind noise.

I have a microphone that has a resistance of 1.8K ohm, so I guess it's a
carbon. I have read somewhere that I should have approximately 1mA running
through it. Is that correct and what kind of amplitude should I expect out
of the microphone?
 
E

ehsjr

Jan 1, 1970
0
Rune said:
Hi.

I'm building a microphone amplifier and filter for a communication system
for my motorcycle. I'm filtering away frequencies below 1KHz to suppress
wind noise.

I have a microphone that has a resistance of 1.8K ohm, so I guess it's a
carbon. I have read somewhere that I should have approximately 1mA running
through it. Is that correct and what kind of amplitude should I expect out
of the microphone?

If you have 1 mA current running through 1.8K ohms
resistance, you will have a voltage across the resistance
of .001 * 1800 or 1.8 volts.

As to what you read (the 1 mA) and what you guess about
the mike, who can say? We'd be guessing, based on your
guess. Facts would be helpful!

Ed
 
W

Walter Harley

Jan 1, 1970
0
ehsjr said:
If you have 1 mA current running through 1.8K ohms
resistance, you will have a voltage across the resistance
of .001 * 1800 or 1.8 volts.

As to what you read (the 1 mA) and what you guess about
the mike, who can say? We'd be guessing, based on your
guess. Facts would be helpful!


Ed, I think he's asking about the AC amplitude.

What AC amplitude is typical, for speech into a carbon mic element?
 
R

Rune D. Jørgensen

Jan 1, 1970
0
Det var smuk og solrig dag da ehsjr skrev
i sci.electronics.basics:
If you have 1 mA current running through 1.8K ohms
resistance, you will have a voltage across the resistance
of .001 * 1800 or 1.8 volts.

I know ohm's law...
As to what you read (the 1 mA) and what you guess about
the mike, who can say? We'd be guessing, based on your
guess. Facts would be helpful!

Facts would be helpful, indeed. But I don't have the facts. If I did I
wouldn't be asking here.
If I had an oscilloscope I could just measure it, but I haven't got one.

There must be some rule of thumb, as to what current should run through the
microphone, and what signal amplitude to expect. Is it 10mV, a 100mV or a
1V?
 
R

Rune D. Jørgensen

Jan 1, 1970
0
Det var smuk og solrig dag da Walter Harley skrev
i
sci.electronics.basics:
Ed, I think he's asking about the AC amplitude.

What AC amplitude is typical, for speech into a carbon mic element?

You're spot on :) It's of course the signal amplitude, I need to know.
 
D

Don Bowey

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi.

I'm building a microphone amplifier and filter for a communication system
for my motorcycle. I'm filtering away frequencies below 1KHz to suppress
wind noise.

I have a microphone that has a resistance of 1.8K ohm, so I guess it's a
carbon. I have read somewhere that I should have approximately 1mA running
through it. Is that correct and what kind of amplitude should I expect out
of the microphone?

I don't believe that is a carbon mike. I may not be up-to-date on them, but
in my experience carbon mikes tend to have a resistance of 200 Ohms or so.
In practice the current could be 10 milliamps, more or less, and the
resulting signal from a good quality unit might be as much as 0.5V with a
circuit voltage of about 4 to 6V.

Don
 
D

Dan Akers

Jan 1, 1970
0
Rune D. Jørgensen wrote;
"I'm building a microphone amplifier and filter for a communication
system for my motorcycle. I'm filtering away frequencies below 1KHz to
suppress wind noise.
I have a microphone that has a resistance of 1.8K ohm, so I guess it's a
carbon. I have read somewhere that I should have approximately 1mA
running through it. Is that correct and what kind of amplitude should I
expect out of the microphone?"
______________________________________
Re;
Assuming it is a carbon microphone and you don't have the make and model
#. There is no current/sound pressure thumb-rule, that I know of, that
would cover all carbon mikes. Although the characteristic resistance for
yours may be 1.8kohm, the voltage amplitude produced for a given sound
pressure with 1 mA excitation is highly dependent on the surface area
and frequency response of the diaphragm, the particular density response
of the carbon pack, and the characteristic input impedance of the
electrical load on the microphone and it's power supply. Without these
particulars you are just guessing, as are we, and you will probably need
an oscilloscope to determine the electrical response to voice in your
planned circuit.

Dan Akers
 
E

ehsjr

Jan 1, 1970
0
Rune said:
Det var smuk og solrig dag da Walter Harley skrev
i
sci.electronics.basics:




You're spot on :) It's of course the signal amplitude, I need to know.



You guys may not be aware of how a carbon mike works.
You seem to think that the mike generates a voltage.
It doesn't. A voltage must be supplied to it. Sound
varies the pressure on the carbon, which causes its
resistance to vary. That causes the current through
the mike to vary.

What is the typical signal amplitude of a carbon mike?
Meaningless question. A carbon mike is not a source.
Without knowing the source voltage one cannot say what
the amplitude will be. Likewise, without knowing the load
impedance, one cannot say what the amplitude will be.
The signal (and by that I assume you mean the voltage
drop across the mike) is a result of the current through
the resistance of the carbon. That current depends on
source voltage and load impedance, as well as mike
impedance at a given audio level & frequency.

Ed
 
W

Walter Harley

Jan 1, 1970
0
ehsjr said:
You guys may not be aware of how a carbon mike works.
You seem to think that the mike generates a voltage.
It doesn't. A voltage must be supplied to it. Sound
varies the pressure on the carbon, which causes its
resistance to vary. That causes the current through
the mike to vary.

What is the typical signal amplitude of a carbon mike?
Meaningless question. A carbon mike is not a source.
Without knowing the source voltage one cannot say what
the amplitude will be. Likewise, without knowing the load
impedance, one cannot say what the amplitude will be.
The signal (and by that I assume you mean the voltage
drop across the mike) is a result of the current through
the resistance of the carbon. That current depends on
source voltage and load impedance, as well as mike
impedance at a given audio level & frequency.

Ed, the OP asked about how much AC voltage is generated across the mic if he
runs a DC current through it and presents it with an acoustic signal. Since
a carbon mic behaves like a variable resistor, that is an entirely
meaningful question: if a DC current is applied to a variable resistor, the
voltage across the resistor will vary. The unanswered part is "how variable
is the resistor"? Does it vary by 1% before clippping, or 10%, or what?
Does the resistance increase, or decrease, or both, compared to nominal?

Or, you could answer a different question, that still could reasonably be
presumed to be helpful: what sort of circuit might one typically and
usefully employ, to develop an electrical signal from a carbon mic?

Dan Akers suggested that there's just no way to know. But I suspect that
knowing the answer for "some" specific carbon mic would be more helpful than
knowing nothing at all - even if it's an order of magnitude away from this
one, it's a starting point.
 
B

Ban

Jan 1, 1970
0
Walter said:
Ed, the OP asked about how much AC voltage is generated across the
mic if he runs a DC current through it and presents it with an
acoustic signal. Since a carbon mic behaves like a variable
resistor, that is an entirely meaningful question: if a DC current is
applied to a variable resistor, the voltage across the resistor will
vary. The unanswered part is "how variable is the resistor"? Does
it vary by 1% before clippping, or 10%, or what? Does the resistance
increase, or decrease, or both, compared to nominal?
Or, you could answer a different question, that still could
reasonably be presumed to be helpful: what sort of circuit might one
typically and usefully employ, to develop an electrical signal from a
carbon mic?
Dan Akers suggested that there's just no way to know. But I suspect
that knowing the answer for "some" specific carbon mic would be more
helpful than knowing nothing at all - even if it's an order of
magnitude away from this one, it's a starting point.

A carbon capsule is likely to be big and went after the advent of electret
mikes into the garbage bin and no sane person will use this technology for
other then close voice pickup and drving a horn speaker directly though a
12V battery, a megaphone without amp. When the OP measured some resistance,
it doesn't mean it is only resistive, but might be an Electret mike which
have about 0.5mA bias current and might on a multimeter show up as some
obscure value.
If the OP would also measure with the test leads crossed the same resistance
it is certainly not an electret mike, exept those with 3 pins where there is
a resistor between supply and output.
 
J

John Jardine.

Jan 1, 1970
0
Ban said:
Walter Harley wrote: [...]

A carbon capsule is likely to be big and went after the advent of electret
mikes into the garbage bin and no sane person will use this technology for
other then close voice pickup and drving a horn speaker directly though a
12V battery, a megaphone without amp. When the OP measured some resistance,
it doesn't mean it is only resistive, but might be an Electret mike which
have about 0.5mA bias current and might on a multimeter show up as some
obscure value.
If the OP would also measure with the test leads crossed the same resistance
it is certainly not an electret mike, exept those with 3 pins where there is
a resistor between supply and output.
Yes.
Hoping someone would mention they came out of the Ark.
Measured one of the Electret types at 1.0Kohm in one direction and 1.4Kohm
in the other direction.
Also hooked up a couple of mic's I've kicking around.
A cheap Electret, with a 5V supply and 4k7 load resistor gives about 3mV
rms, normal voice, 50mm away.
Another cheap mic' (dynamic?) measured 560ohms and gave about 200uV rms
under same speaking distance.
john
 
E

ehsjr

Jan 1, 1970
0
Walter said:
Ed, the OP asked about how much AC voltage is generated across the mic if he
runs a DC current through it and presents it with an acoustic signal. Since
a carbon mic behaves like a variable resistor, that is an entirely
meaningful question: if a DC current is applied to a variable resistor, the
voltage across the resistor will vary. The unanswered part is "how variable
is the resistor"? Does it vary by 1% before clippping, or 10%, or what?
Does the resistance increase, or decrease, or both, compared to nominal?

You don't even know if he has a carbon mike! Then you post
the above and call it an "entirely meaningful" question?
Or, you could answer a different question, that still could reasonably be
presumed to be helpful: what sort of circuit might one typically and
usefully employ, to develop an electrical signal from a carbon mic?

Dan Akers suggested that there's just no way to know. But I suspect that
knowing the answer for "some" specific carbon mic would be more helpful than
knowing nothing at all - even if it's an order of magnitude away from this
one, it's a starting point.

Balderdash. The OP is *guessing* he has a carbon mike.
If he does not then what good is it posting "the answer"
(if one existed) concerning a specific carbon mike?

You mention 'the answer for "some" specific carbon mic'
There is no "the answer ...", for crying out loud. It depends
on external (to the mike) circuit elements: the load and the
source. "The answer" does not exist.

What you are suggesting is to give the op something that
doesn't exist, for an unknown circuit for an unknown mike.
Misleading the op that way is not helpful.

Ed
 
W

Walter Harley

Jan 1, 1970
0
ehsjr said:
[...]
Balderdash. The OP is *guessing* he has a carbon mike.
If he does not then what good is it posting "the answer"
(if one existed) concerning a specific carbon mike?

You mention 'the answer for "some" specific carbon mic'
There is no "the answer ...", for crying out loud. It depends
on external (to the mike) circuit elements: the load and the
source. "The answer" does not exist.


Here, let me try one more time. I'll ask a hypothetical question that is
different than the OP's, but that might be informative nonetheless. I know
it's hard to answer hypothetical questions, but some people manage okay.

Let's say I have a friend who thinks he has a carbon mic element - maybe he
got it out of a 1950s-era telephone operator's headset. He thinks it's
carbon because it's old and when he shakes it, it rattles. He offers to
give it to me.

Now, I don't have it yet. But I want to think a little about what sort of
circuit might get some audio out of it. So, on the hypothesis that it is
indeed a carbon mic, I imagine I will hook it up to a 1mA constant DC
current source. (Note that the AC impedance of a DC current source is
infinite. The load and source are thus specified, just as they were in my
earlier question.)

1. Roughly what AC voltage level might I reasonably expect to see developed
across it, when I speak into it (at, say, 75dB SPL)? Are we talking tens of
uV, or tens of mV, or ...?

2. Does the performance of this microphone technology depend on a particular
current being passed through it? Would, for instance, 10mA be better than
1mA, in terms of the linearity and dynamic range of the mic?

3. Would it be better (in terms of linearity and dynamic range) to apply a
constant DC voltage and measure AC current variation, or to apply a constant
DC current and measure AC voltage variation?

4. What circuit conditions would this element have typically been used in,
and in those conditions, what sort of AC signal would it typically develop?
 
R

Rich Grise

Jan 1, 1970
0
Det var smuk og solrig dag da ehsjr skrev

Facts would be helpful, indeed. But I don't have the facts. If I did I
wouldn't be asking here.

That's not the kind of facts we're talking about. We need to know all of
the facts that _you_ have, now - otherwise, we're guessing in the dark.
If I had an oscilloscope I could just measure it, but I haven't got one.

There must be some rule of thumb, as to what current should run through the
microphone, and what signal amplitude to expect. Is it 10mV, a 100mV or a
1V?

The first thing is, how sure are you that it's a carbon mic? If, as you
say, the mic has a DC resistance of 1.8K and a spec'd current of 1 mA,
then you could take a 3V battery (like 2x D cells), a 1.2K fixed resistor,
and put them in series with the mic:

+----[1K2]-----+ A
+ | |
[3V batt] [MIC]
| |
+--------------+ gnd

Then, you should get a signal at point "A" that more or less represents
the audio. You can measure this with a multimeter - put a capacitor at
point A, and an AC voltmeter from the other end of the cap to ground:

+----[1K2]-----+----||----o
+ | | |
[3V batt] [MIC] [DVM]
| | |
+--------------+----------o

I have no idea what kind of voltage you'll get out of it, but it's a
start. Put your meter on, say, 1V full-scale, and shout into the mic.
If the meter doesn't show much, start turning its range down (.1V,
10 mV, etc) until you see something.

If you use an electrolytic cap, be sure and get it the right way around. :)

Good Luck!
Rich
 
D

Don Bowey

Jan 1, 1970
0
ehsjr said:
[...]
Balderdash. The OP is *guessing* he has a carbon mike.
If he does not then what good is it posting "the answer"
(if one existed) concerning a specific carbon mike?

You mention 'the answer for "some" specific carbon mic'
There is no "the answer ...", for crying out loud. It depends
on external (to the mike) circuit elements: the load and the
source. "The answer" does not exist.


Here, let me try one more time. I'll ask a hypothetical question that is
different than the OP's, but that might be informative nonetheless. I know
it's hard to answer hypothetical questions, but some people manage okay.

Let's say I have a friend who thinks he has a carbon mic element - maybe he
got it out of a 1950s-era telephone operator's headset. He thinks it's
carbon because it's old and when he shakes it, it rattles. He offers to
give it to me.

Now, I don't have it yet. But I want to think a little about what sort of
circuit might get some audio out of it. So, on the hypothesis that it is
indeed a carbon mic, I imagine I will hook it up to a 1mA constant DC
current source. (Note that the AC impedance of a DC current source is
infinite. The load and source are thus specified, just as they were in my
earlier question.)

1. Roughly what AC voltage level might I reasonably expect to see developed
across it, when I speak into it (at, say, 75dB SPL)? Are we talking tens of
uV, or tens of mV, or ...?

2. Does the performance of this microphone technology depend on a particular
current being passed through it? Would, for instance, 10mA be better than
1mA, in terms of the linearity and dynamic range of the mic?

3. Would it be better (in terms of linearity and dynamic range) to apply a
constant DC voltage and measure AC current variation, or to apply a constant
DC current and measure AC voltage variation?

4. What circuit conditions would this element have typically been used in,
and in those conditions, what sort of AC signal would it typically develop?

First, figure out if the thing *IS* a carbon mike, then post your questions,
or better yet search google first.

I posted a reasonably straightforward reply to the original post, with
simple circuit information, and giving an estimated output signal amplitude
for a good grade of carbon mike. What's left to discuss before you do some
homework?


Don
 
R

Rune D. Jørgensen

Jan 1, 1970
0
Det var smuk og solrig dag da Don Bowey skrev
i sci.electronics.basics:
I don't believe that is a carbon mike. I may not be up-to-date on
them, but in my experience carbon mikes tend to have a resistance of
200 Ohms or so. In practice the current could be 10 milliamps, more or
less, and the resulting signal from a good quality unit might be as
much as 0.5V with a circuit voltage of about 4 to 6V.

You're right. It isn't a carbon microphone. I have just cut it open(it was
incapsulated in foam) and a google search on "CZ034D" yielded a datacheet

http://akamai.globalsources.com.edgesuite.net/f/593/3445/5d/pdt.static.glob
alsources.com/IMAGES/PDT/SPEC/272/K1000674272.pdf

It seems that it is an electret microphone.

The reason is believed that it was a carbon microphone was the following. I
could measure a DC resistance of 1.8K ohm, and I thought a condenser
microphone would have infinite DC resistance, due to the capacitor.
Electret microphones is "dielectric material that has been permanently
electrically charged or polarised" according to wikipedia, which also
should have infinite DC resistance to the best of my knowledge.
Unfortunately my knowledge was wrong :)
In a dynamic microphone a small movable induction coil, induces a current.
I believe that the DC resistance measured would be the wire resistance, and
I found the 1.8K ohm too high for that.
This lead me to the carbon microphone, and not knowing that they weren't
used anymore, it seemed obvious.
 
W

Walter Harley

Jan 1, 1970
0
Rune D. Jørgensen said:
[...]
The reason is believed that it was a carbon microphone was the following.
I
could measure a DC resistance of 1.8K ohm, and I thought a condenser
microphone would have infinite DC resistance, due to the capacitor.

True. But inside an electret mic element there is more than just the mic
itself. There is also a small JFET buffer amplifier. The electret itself
has a very high impedance, so it can't produce a useful amount of current;
without the buffer, it wouldn't be able to drive the capacitance of the
cable.

In a dynamic microphone a small movable induction coil, induces a current.
I believe that the DC resistance measured would be the wire resistance,
and
I found the 1.8K ohm too high for that.

1.8k would be unusually high, but not impossible. Inside a dynamic mic,
there is usually a transformer to change the output impedance; some mics,
intended for high-impedance loads, have rather high output impedance. High
output impedance from a transformer means lots and lots of turns of very
fine wire; the DC resistance can get pretty high.

The DC resistance of a guitar pickup, which is nothing more than a bunch of
wire wound around a magnet, can easily be more than 5k.


The take-home lesson here is that most modern mics have some additional
circuitry inside them; when you measure across the leads you're not looking
at the actual mic element, so you can't draw the sort of inference that
you're trying to.
 
Top