I'm trying to get Sennheiser to look around for any info that they may find for
the
MKH 110. Too bad their web site is only good for their latest products and
really
not much info on them either.
I'd like to find more info on that mkh 104 power supply, etc. that you
mentioned.
That may give me an idea about how to proceed. I'd really hate to put a
soldering
iron any where around this mic without a good plan.
Thanx,
J
Walter Knapp wrote:
> J. Young wrote:
> > Thanks for the valuable files and pictures Walt. I guess this mic is not
> > going
> > to be as portable as I had hoped. With your info at least I'll have a
> > starting
> > point.
>
> It was not a easy mic to find out about when I started. It is a
> excellent mic once you get it running.
>
> There was a power supply that Sennheiser sold that was just a short
> metal tube to hold a stack of mercury batteries. With that connector
> (male and female) on the ends of it. I think it was made for the
> mkh-104 and so on but could be adapted. I saw some auctioned on ebay
> recently, but did not get them as it would be expensive to buy that many
> batteries all the time.
>
> I'd think you could make it a small, inline box. That's what I do with
> my hydrophone for it's power. Biggest component is the battery. Note I
> use a special rechargeable NIMH 9 volt battery. Most such are 7.2 volts,
> but this one matches alkaline voltages. At full charge it's 10 volts.
> It's a exact replacement for alkalines.
>
> Walt
>
>
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