Maker Pro
Maker Pro

How much/what electrical danger performing on a covered stage during rain?

C

ChairmanOfTheBored

Jan 1, 1970
0
** This criminal MORON does not even know what a performer's " radio mic"
system is.


You're a goddamned retard.
 
C

ChairmanOfTheBored

Jan 1, 1970
0
** Shame none of it is suitable for nor allowed to be used by performers.

Bullshit, asswipe. Every one of them are in legal public bands, IDIOT!
 
C

ChairmanOfTheBored

Jan 1, 1970
0
** ROTFLMAO !!

No performance quality radio mics there at all !!

They can accept ANY mic, including professional audio.

Grow the **** up, AlliTard.
 
P

Phil Allison

Jan 1, 1970
0
"Chairman Of The Lying Autistic MORONS "

The ruggedized devices I spoke of have BETTER audio, video and data
figures than commercial crap does.


** IRRELEVANT BULLSHIT !!





....... Phil
 
P

Phil Allison

Jan 1, 1970
0
"Chairman Of The Lying Autistic MORONS "

"Phil Allison"
You're a goddamned retard.


** LOL

Dead donkeys have higher IQs than this sub human POS.



......... Phil
 
P

Phil Allison

Jan 1, 1970
0
"Chairman Of The Lying Autistic MORONS "



They can accept ANY mic, including professional audio.


** Not usable by music performers - at all.

YOU INSANE STINKING LIAR !!!!!!




......... Phil
 
S

Scott Dorsey

Jan 1, 1970
0
ChairmanOfTheBored said:
They can accept ANY mic, including professional audio.

Grow the **** up, AlliTard.


Wow, and this thread isn't even crossposed to rec.audio.opinion either.
It sure went downhill fast considering the Newsgroups: list.
--scott
 
S

Scott Dorsey

Jan 1, 1970
0
David said:
DC outlets? I've heard tell, but I've never actually seen one.
Do you know if you can you still buy DC and steam in New York?
DC is great for studios and theater because the lamps don't sing.
The problem is, there isn't much other than old resistance dimmers
that will work with DC. Have you seen it in other places?

Coincidentally, I just saw the following web citation:
http://www.nypost.com/seven/09052007/news/regionalnews/con_ed_to_ko_its_dc.htm
--scott
 
M

Martin Griffith

Jan 1, 1970
0
You're a goddamned idiot, and you couldn't debate if your life depended
on it, twit.


I wouldn't work "a show you have". Your shows are shit. I have,
however made wireless mic systems that pass voice, video and data over
VARIOUS bands.

Some are used by LEOs. Some are used on carrier decks.

Do you even know what a diversity receiver is?


You're an idiot. The devices I mentioned are using a proprietary
packet model, and it utilizes QAM 256.



You're an idiot.


Thanks for proving the above assertion.
**** off, you ten years behind the curve retard.

http://www.avalonrf.com/Products/transmitters.html

Wow, what horrible bits of kit those are. They look as if they are
made in N Korea.

These are what professionals use
http://www.lectrosonics.com/wireless/wireless.htm


Martin
 
C

Camel

Jan 1, 1970
0
Your engineers cut the grounds off the plugs ?????
Glad i don't work with those engineers!!

A proper design will factor in the use of current as well as older
style equiptment (which would include the recomended plug style)

Current equiptment requires the upgrade of all lines & such and
therefore - in this world of 3-prong plugs - design has changed.

I can only hope that your engineers have stopped cutting the saftey
factor from your equiptment.
 
D

David McCall

Jan 1, 1970
0
Camel said:
Your engineers cut the grounds off the plugs ?????
Glad i don't work with those engineers!!

A proper design will factor in the use of current as well as older
style equiptment (which would include the recomended plug style)

Current equiptment requires the upgrade of all lines & such and
therefore - in this world of 3-prong plugs - design has changed.

I can only hope that your engineers have stopped cutting the saftey
factor from your equiptment.
We're talking early 60s and these guys were a lot older than I was,
so I'll bet they stopped by now (probably stopped for good by now).

Everything was grounded separately in a carefully designed scheme
to eliminate ground loops, just not with the power cord.

David
 
G

Guest

Jan 1, 1970
0
In rec.audio.pro Joseph Ashwood said:
For the most paranoid, see all those cables? They contain electricity.

It is the volts that hurt, but the amps that kill. A phantom powered
microphone should not have much in the way of amperage, worst case, go
wireless they simply don't have the power to begin with. the real concern
really is every amplifier, every speaker, every speaker cable, it only takes
half an amp to kill a human,

It takes a lot less than that - .05A across the heart can kill you,
and .1A across the heart will most likely cause destructive ventricular
fibrillation.
 
J

John Williamson

Jan 1, 1970
0
It takes a lot less than that - .05A across the heart can kill you,
and .1A across the heart will most likely cause destructive ventricular
fibrillation.
For what it's worth, In Europe, a ground fault protection device *must*
trigger at no more than 30 milliamps after no more than 30 milliseconds.
There are`also rules about regular testing of fixed installations, & for
testing temporary installations before first use.
 
D

David Lee

Jan 1, 1970
0
John Williamson wrote...
For what it's worth, In Europe, a ground fault protection device *must* trigger at no more than 30
milliamps after no more than 30 milliseconds.
There are`also rules about regular testing of fixed installations, & for testing temporary
installations before first use.

Actually RCDs are available with tripping currents of 10, 30, 100 & 300mA and in time delayed
versions. That's only from the MK "Sentry" catalogue - there are probably others available as well.

David
 
M

Matthew Beasley

Jan 1, 1970
0
Michael A. Terrell said:
Scott, I still pull green wire with EMT.

My personal favorite is when no green wire is pulled in the EMT feed to a
three phase panel without a neutral. Then another bozo comes along and adds
a single phase circuit and terminates the neutral to the ground bar (just
like you would in the main panel, right.....)

And then the customer wonders why sparks come out of the conduit joints and
employees get tingled when the touch the equipment. Yes, I've seen it more
than once.
 
M

Matthew Beasley

Jan 1, 1970
0
Scott Dorsey said:
I got one word for you: NEMA Twist-Locks. Available from 15A on up.
They make the Europlug look cheap and flimsy!
--scott

Maybe the europlug, but not the BS plug. That thing looks like it belongs
on a clothes dryer, not small appliances.
 
C

ChairmanOfTheBored

Jan 1, 1970
0
Wow, what horrible bits of kit those are.


"bits of kit"

Get some language in your life, retard.

No, sorry chump. Rugged gear does not EVER look like it is made
overseas.

What a sorry bit of kit god gave you for a brain.
 
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