You can buy an ART Tube preamp cheap. Just set it on your amp, plug
the output into your amp and plug your mic into the input for the
phantom power you need. They're on sale at the moment at Musicians
Friend even cheaper than what I paid on eBay:
http://www.musiciansfriend.com/product/ART-Tube-MP-Studio-Mic-Preamp?sku=180581
- Robert
www.RawFoodLife.com
"RawFoodGuy" <resul...@gmail.com> wrote in message
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"harpo" <ianh...@talktalk.net> wrote in message
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The short answer is no there is no such piece of wizardry.
How are you planning on powering the phantom unit itself? The only mic
that I know of that is small and has onboard phantom power is the Sony
ECMMS907. Even if you gutted one for the power unit it runs on a single
AA battery that is gonna be *well* under the 48 volts your cap probably
wants to see.
Even if you do find a 48v unit small enough to fit you're gonna have to
run a power supply to it. Given THAT inescapable reality what difference
does it make if the phantom power unit is onboard the mic or not?....you
*still* have to run an extra wire into the mic be it TO the onboard
phantom power unit or FROM the external phantom power unit to the cap.
If you use the same amp all the time why not install the phantom power
in the amp rather then the mic? Much more doable. With an open back amp
it'd be easy enough to stick a phantom unit in the back with velcro so
you could take it out and use it with another amp if you ever needed to.
The condenser needs over 6 volts dc to be fed up the two signal pins
of the xlr connection. I have seen (many moons ago) a setup using two
batteries to provide the dc current to a condenser mic. The batteries
were a pair of 9 volt alkalines that got the job done. Bit of wiring
to achieve this I'm sure. But it can work if you research it and will
not put up with a preamp, or di box of some kind... or running through
a PA channel with phantom power. I use a Behringer Shark for this
purpose and it adds the flexibility of a compressor, a limiter, a
feedback destroyer, and it will output either an xlr or regular 1/4"
phone plug (balanced or not).
regards,
Skeeter