Lectrosonics SMQH, SMQV, SMQL, SMQM User Manual

SM
Super Miniature Belt-Pack Transmitter
Including SMD, SMQ
INSTRUCTION MANUAL
With Digital Hybrid Wireless™ Technology
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Rio Rancho, NM, USA www.lectrosonics.com
SM
Thank you for selecting the Lectrosonics SM ultra­miniature transmitter. The unique design provides several distinct features for professional applications:
Outstanding RF operating range
Superb audio quality
Ultra-lightweight, corrosion resistant housing
Water resistant seals for use in damp environments
Programmable compatibility modes for maximum versatility
The Digital Hybrid WirelessTM design (US Patent Pending) combines 24-bit digital audio with analog FM resulting in a system that has the same operating range as analog systems (plus the graceful failure at the limits of that range), the same spectral efficiency as analog systems, the same long battery life as analog systems, but with the excellent audio found in digital systems.
The SM uses a standard Lectrosonics 5-pin type input jack for use with electret lavaliere mic, dynamic mic, or line level signals. A water resistant control panel with LCD, membrane switches and multi-color LEDs make input gain adjustments and frequency and compatibility mode selection quick and accurate, without having to view the receiver. The battery compartment accepts an AA lithium battery. Plus, the SM is machined from a solid aluminum block to provide an extremely light­weight and rugged package. A special non-corrosive finish (the same one used by NASA) resists salt water exposure and perspiration in extreme environments.
The DSP-based design works with all Digital Hybrid recievers, and is backward compatible with Lectrosonics 200 and 100 Series and IFB receivers and some other brands of analog wireless receivers. Only the SM transmitter is covered in this manual. Compan­ion receivers are covered in separate manuals.
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Super-Minature Belt Pack Transmitter
Table of Contents
General Technical Description ..............................................................................................................................................................4
Introduction ...........................................................................................................................................................................................4
Digital Hybrid Wireless™ Technology* ................................................................................................................................................. 4
No Pre-Emphasis/De-Emphasis ........................................................................................................................................................... 4
Low Frequency Roll-Off ........................................................................................................................................................................ 4
Input Limiter ..........................................................................................................................................................................................5
Digital Signal Processor ....................................................................................................................................................................... 5
Microprocessor, PLL and VCO Circuits ................................................................................................................................................ 5
Compatibility Modes .............................................................................................................................................................................5
Pilot Tone Squelch ................................................................................................................................................................................5
Control Panel ........................................................................................................................................................................................5
Wide-Band Deviation ............................................................................................................................................................................5
Battery Life ........................................................................................................................................................................................... 5
Frequency Agility .................................................................................................................................................................................. 5
Circulator/Isolator ................................................................................................................................................................................. 5
Controls and Functions .........................................................................................................................................................................6
LCD Screen ..........................................................................................................................................................................................6
Power LED ............................................................................................................................................................................................ 6
Audio Input Jack ...................................................................................................................................................................................6
Modulation LEDs ..................................................................................................................................................................................6
Audio Button .........................................................................................................................................................................................6
Freq Button ...........................................................................................................................................................................................6
Up/Down Arrows................................................................................................................................................................................... 6
Antenna ................................................................................................................................................................................................6
Battery Compartment and Thumb Screw .............................................................................................................................................6
SM Screen Selections ............................................................................................................................................................................7
Audio Screen ........................................................................................................................................................................................7
Frequency Screen ................................................................................................................................................................................7
Compatibility Mode Screen ..................................................................................................................................................................7
Lock/Unlock Screen..............................................................................................................................................................................7
Power On Timer Screen ....................................................................................................................................................................... 7
Power Off Timer Screen ....................................................................................................................................................................... 7
Standby Mode ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 8
Battery Installation .................................................................................................................................................................................8
Operating Instructions ..........................................................................................................................................................................9
Power Up and Boot Sequence .............................................................................................................................................................9
Power Down .........................................................................................................................................................................................9
Standby Mode ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 9
Selecting the Compatibility Mode .........................................................................................................................................................9
Setting Transmitter Operating Frequency ........................................................................................................................................... 10
Attaching a Microphone and Adjusting Gain ...................................................................................................................................... 10
Locking or Unlocking the Control Panel.............................................................................................................................................. 11
5-Pin Input Jack Wiring ........................................................................................................................................................................ 12
Microphone RF Bypassing ................................................................................................................................................................. 12
Line Level Signals .............................................................................................................................................................................. 12
Wiring Hookups for Different Sources ...............................................................................................................................................13
Troubleshooting ...................................................................................................................................................................................16
Specifications and Features ............................................................................................................................................................... 18
Service and Repair ...............................................................................................................................................................................19
Returning Units for Repair ..................................................................................................................................................................19
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General Technical Description
Introduction
The SM transmitter uses ±75 kHz wide deviation for an extremely high signal to noise ratio, switching power supplies to provide constant voltages to the transmitter circuits from the beginning (1.5 Volts) to the end (0.85 Volts) of battery life, and an ultra low noise input amplifier for quiet operation. It is gain protected with a wide range dual envelope input limiter which cleanly limits input signal peaks over 30 dB above full modulation.
Servo Input
The SM input is a radically different input system compared to previous Lectrosonics transmitter micro­phone inputs. It is so superior that this input system will eventually be utilized by all Lectrosonics UHF transmit­ters. This may cause some confusion but the advan­tages are very real. The improvements are audible and make the transmitters easier to use and much harder to overload. It is no longer necessary on some mics to introduce pads to prevent overload of the input stage, divide the bias voltage down for some low voltage mics, or reduce the limiter range at minimum gain settings.
Digital Hybrid Wireless™ Technology*
All wireless links suffer from channel noise to some degree, and all wireless microphone systems seek to minimize the impact of that noise on the desired signal. Conventional analog systems use compandors for enhanced dynamic range, at the cost of subtle artifacts (known as “pumping” and “breathing”). Wholly digital systems defeat the noise by sending the audio informa­tion in digital form, at the cost of some combination of power, bandwidth and resistance to interference.
*US Patent Pending
Lectrosonics Digital Hybrid Wireless™ systems over­come channel noise in a dramatically new way, digitally encoding the audio in the transmitter and decoding it in the receiver, yet still sending the encoded information via an analog FM wireless link. This proprietary algo­rithm is not a digital implementation of an analog compandor but a technique that can be accomplished only in the digital domain, even though the inputs and outputs are analog.
Channel noise still impacts received signal quality and will eventually overwhelm a receiver. Digital Hybrid Wireless™ simply encodes the signal to use a noisy channel as efficiently and robustly as possible, yielding audio performance that rivals that of wholly digital systems, without the power and bandwidth problems inherent in digital transmission.
Because it uses an analog FM link, Digital Hybrid Wireless™ enjoys all the benefits of conventional FM wireless systems, such as excellent range, efficient use of RF spectrum, and resistance to interference. How­ever, unlike conventional FM systems, it does away with the analog compandor and its artifacts.
No Pre-Emphasis/De-Emphasis
The Digital Hybrid Wireless™ design results in a signal­to-noise ratio high enough to preclude the need for conventional pre-emphasis (HF boost) in the transmitter and de-emphasis (HF roll off) in the receiver.
Low Frequency Roll-Off
A 12 dB per octave low frequency roll-off is provided in the audio section, with the -3 dB point at 70 Hz. The
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Super-Minature Belt Pack Transmitter
actual roll-off frequency will vary somewhat according to the low frequency response of the mic capsule being used.
The low frequency roll-off is used to remove subsonic (or very low frequency) audio, often produced by air conditioning systems, automobile traffic and other sources from the audio signal. Excessive low frequency content in the audio input can cause a variety of audio problems including driving the transmitter into limiting.
Input Limiter
A DSP-controlled analog audio limiter is employed before the analog-to-digital converter. The limiter has a range of more than 30 dB for excellent overload protec­tion. A dual release envelope makes the limiter acousti­cally transparent while maintaining low distortion. It can be thought of as two limiters in series, connected as a fast attack and release limiter followed by a slow attack and release limiter. The limiter recovers quickly from brief transients, so that its action is hidden from the listener, but recovers slowly from sustained high levels, to both keep audio distortion low and preserve short term dynamic changes.
Two bicolor LEDs indicate limiter activity. (See
ing Instructions, Adjusting Audio Levels
.)
Operat-
Digital Signal Processor
The DSP encodes the digitized audio from the A-D Converter and adds an ultrasonic Pilot Tone to control the receiver's squelch (only in 400 Series, 200 Series, IFB Compatibility Mode, and Mode 6 – see
Squelch
). It also controls the input limiter.
Pilot Tone
Microprocessor, PLL and VCO Circuits
An 8-bit microprocessor monitors user command inputs from the Control Panel buttons and numerous other internal signals. It works intimately with the DSP to ensure the audio is encoded according to the selected Compatibility Mode and the correct pilot tone is added to the encoded signal. (See drives the LCD display and operates the PLL/VCO circuits.
Pilot Tone Squelch
.) It also
Compatibility Modes
The SM transmitter was designed to operate with Lectrosonics 400 Series receivers and will yield the best performance when doing so. However, due to the flexibility of digital signal processing, the SM is also able to operate with Lectrosonics 200 Series, Lectrosonics 100 Series, IFB and certain non-Lectrosonics receivers in special compatibility modes. (Contact the Lectroson­ics Sales Department for a complete list of non­Lectrosonics compatible receivers.)
Pilot Tone Squelch
A fixed frequency pilot tone squelch system (such as Lectrosonics 200 Series) ensures that a receiver remains muted until it receives the pilot tone from the matching transmitter, even if a strong RF signal is present on the carrier frequency of the system.
The 400 Series (Digital Hybrid Wireless™) takes this a step further by using one of 256 different ultrasonic tones between 25 kHz and 32 kHz to modulate the carrier and operate the receiver squelch. The pilot tone frequency is chosen according to which of the 256 channels has been selected. (See
tions
.)
This ensures that all transmitters in a system have different pilot tone frequencies so that even spurious RF from the wrong transmitters can’t open the receiver squelch.
SM Screen Selec-
Control Panel
A waterproof control panel which includes four mem­brane switches and an LCD screen is used to set and adjust the operational settings, and also provide a visual feedback of overall system operation. (See
Controls and Functions.
)
Wide-Band Deviation
A ±75 kHz deviation improves the capture ratio, signal to noise ratio and AM rejection of a wireless system dramatically, compared to other designs that use 30 kHz to 40 kHz deviation. This combined with a full 100 mW of power output makes a significant improvement in signal to noise ratio and maximum operating range.
Battery Life
Switching power supplies throughout the design allow about 4.5 hours of operation using a single AA lithium battery (Two AA batteries for the SMD/Q). If shorter operating times are acceptable, an alkaline or NiMH battery can be used. In the SM, AA alkaline batteries provide about 2 hours of operation, and a NiMH AA battery provides about 3.5 hours of operation.
Note: A NiMH battery will give little or no warning when it is depleted. If you wish to use NiMH batteries, we recommend trying fully charged batteries in the unit, noting the length of time that the batteries will run the unit and then using the battery timer feature available on most 400 Series receivers.
The battery contact is designed to prevent “rattle” as the unit is handled.
Frequency Agility
The transmitter section uses a synthesized, frequency selectable main oscillator. The frequency is extremely stable over a wide temperature range and over time. 256 frequencies in 100 kHz steps over a 25.5 MHz range are available.
Circulator/Isolator
The RF output circuit includes a one way circulator/ isolator using a magnetically polarized ferrite. This device greatly reduces RF intermodulation produced when multiple transmitters are used at separations of less than five feet. It also provides additional RF output stage protection but is rarely seen in a wireless micro­phone transmitter due to its high cost.
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Controls and Functions
Modulation
LEDs
Battery
Compartment
Cover Plate
Battery Compartment Thumb Screw
PWR LED
Control Panel
AUDIO Button
LCD
UP Arrow
Antenna
Audio
Input Jack
FREQ Button
LCD Screen
The LCD is a numeric-type Liquid Crystal Display used in conjunction with the AUDIO and FREQ buttons, and the UP and Down arrows, to configure the SM. (See SM SCREEN SELECTIONS.) It is also used with the Modulation and PWR LEDs to monitor system operation.
Power LED
The PWR LED glows green when the battery is good. The color changes to red when there is about 30 minutes of operation left with the recommended lithium battery. (An alkaline battery will have about 20 minutes of life left.) When the LED begins to blink red, there are only a few minutes of life.
Note: A NiMH battery will give little or no warning when it is depleted. If you wish to use NiMH batteries in the SM, we recommend trying fully charged batteries in the unit, noting the length of time that the batteries will run the unit and then using the battery timer feature available on most 400 Series receivers.
A weak battery will sometimes cause the PWR LED to glow green immediately after being put in the unit, but will soon discharge to the point where the LED will go red or shut off completely. When the SM is in SLEEP mode, the LED blinks green every few seconds (See
Sleep Mode
, page X).
Signal Level -20 LED -10 LED
Less than -20 dB Off Off
-20 dB to -10 dB Green Off
-10 dB to +0 dB Green Green
+0 dB to +10 dB Red Green
Greater than +10 db Red Red
Audio Button
The AUDIO button is used to display the audio level setting (0 dB to 44 dB) on the LCD and used in con­junction with the Up and Down arrows to adjust the audio level input from the microphone.
The AUDIO button is also used with the FREQ button to enter standby mode and to power the transmitter on or off.
Freq Button
The SM provides 256 individual frequencies, in 100 kHz increments, across a 25.5 MHz frequency block. The FREQ Button displays the selected operating frequency and also toggles the LCD between displaying the actual operating frequency in MHz and a two-digit hexadeci­mal number that corresponds to the equivalent Lec­trosonics Frequency Switch Setting.
The FREQ button is also used with the AUDIO button to enter standby mode and to power the transmitter on or off.
Up/Down Arrows
The Up and Down arrow buttons are used to select the operating frequency, adjust the audio level, or set the Compatibility Mode.
Pressing both arrows simultaneously enters the lock countdown. Holding the two arrow buttons until the countdown completes locks the control panel buttons so they can only be used to display current settings. “Loc” is displayed to indicate the controls are locked.
Once locked, the buttons can be unlocked only by removing the battery, or via the remote control (if enabled).
Audio Input Jack
The input on the SM accommodates virtually every lavaliere, handheld or shotgun microphone available. Different line level signals can also be accommodated. (See
LINE LEVEL SIGNALS
WIRING
.)
and
5-PIN INPUT JACK
Modulation LEDs
The Modulation LEDs provide a visual indication of the input audio signal level from the microphone. These two bicolor LEDs can glow either red or green to indicate modulation levels.
Antenna
The fixed flexible cable antenna is supplied with the transmitter. This antenna is cut to the 1/4 wavelength of the center of the frequency block (the frequency range) of the transmitter.
Battery Compartment and Thumb Screw
The large knurled thumbscrew is used to release or secure the Battery Compartment Cover Plate, allowing access to the battery.
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