6.35mm to 3.5 mm impedance mismatch?

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p1879

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I have a friend trying to send an audio feed to a low power fm transmitter from his home stereo amp/receiver, he is using the 1/4 or 6.35mm headphone jack as the source to the 3.5mm tx input. He gets a lot of distortion that he does not get when he uses, for example, the 3.5mm jack on the computer. Could there be a mis-match of some sort going on?

I feel sure there is a simple solution, and I am hoping one of the wise-ones will enlighten me so my friend can transmit his jazz to his workshop.

thanks for any wisdom!
p1879
 

p1879

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I should have clarified that he is using n adapter to mate the 3.5 mm tx input plug to the receiver/amp front-panel headphone jack.
thanks,
p1879
 

prcguy

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Generally speaking, a modern headphone output should turn down low enough to drive a line level input of another device and impedance matching should not be a problem. Is the transmitter designed to be fed with a microphone or another line level source? If the transmitter is expecting a microphone then a headphone output will definitely have too high of a level and would need to be attenuated.
prcguy



I should have clarified that he is using n adapter to mate the 3.5 mm tx input plug to the receiver/amp front-panel headphone jack.
thanks,
p1879
 

p1879

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Thanks prcguy. He wants to re-transmit his satellite radio feed, which runs through his receiver/amp in his living room. He is a musician and knows about mixing, etc and I had told him to experiment with the audio drive from the receiver, which he did. The transmitter is one of those Chinese things (which he wanted because it had an ac power supply), and he does run it on the low power setting. He also tried the jack on a Scosche fm tx and it too suffered distortion, but neither unit did when fed from his computer audio. To me, this seems like it is a problem with the jack, a mismatch, or some other problem with the stereo receiver.
I warned him about the famously sloppy signal from those Chinese desktop transmitters, but checking with my car radio it only seems to get out about 20 meters, and his house does have a metal roof, hopefully it doesn't transmit unwanted spurs. He wants to get a new receiver because of this problem, but his receiver works just fine. I am going to take a look at his sat module that feeds the stereo, maybe he can take the signal from there. He has good luck selling stuff on Craigslist, so maybe he can change units painlessly, but I hate to see him go to that bother if it is a small issue like attenuation. I am going into the big town nearby with him today, maybe we can get an attenuating plug to try somewhere. I have tried to convince him he can get good music from internet radio, a great favorite of mine. He has been receptive somewhat, but likes his sat radio a lot. Internet radio is my new "shortwave" Some of you would not remember that when we wanted to hear news or music from the rest of the world we had to work with the vagaries of the ionosphere and undergo an aural beating of all sorts.
 

prcguy

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So Cal - Richardson, TX - Tewksbury, MA
You can try a simple attenuator with two resistors, place a 1k ohm across the source from hot to ground and place a 10k ohm resistor in series between the two units. This should identify if the transmitter is simply getting too much signal and distorting due to overload. If its much better but still too touchy on the source volume control you can up the series resistor to maybe 47K and/or reduce the 1k down to 100 ohm, etc.
prcguy



Thanks prcguy. He wants to re-transmit his satellite radio feed, which runs through his receiver/amp in his living room. He is a musician and knows about mixing, etc and I had told him to experiment with the audio drive from the receiver, which he did. The transmitter is one of those Chinese things (which he wanted because it had an ac power supply), and he does run it on the low power setting. He also tried the jack on a Scosche fm tx and it too suffered distortion, but neither unit did when fed from his computer audio. To me, this seems like it is a problem with the jack, a mismatch, or some other problem with the stereo receiver.
I warned him about the famously sloppy signal from those Chinese desktop transmitters, but checking with my car radio it only seems to get out about 20 meters, and his house does have a metal roof, hopefully it doesn't transmit unwanted spurs. He wants to get a new receiver because of this problem, but his receiver works just fine. I am going to take a look at his sat module that feeds the stereo, maybe he can take the signal from there. He has good luck selling stuff on Craigslist, so maybe he can change units painlessly, but I hate to see him go to that bother if it is a small issue like attenuation. I am going into the big town nearby with him today, maybe we can get an attenuating plug to try somewhere. I have tried to convince him he can get good music from internet radio, a great favorite of mine. He has been receptive somewhat, but likes his sat radio a lot. Internet radio is my new "shortwave" Some of you would not remember that when we wanted to hear news or music from the rest of the world we had to work with the vagaries of the ionosphere and undergo an aural beating of all sorts.
 
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