4-wire question: If you had 3 audio consoles with each having a talkback mic, could you submix (sum) the talkback mics into a aux bus on one of the consoles and send that aux out to a 4-wire input port…and thus have everyone on that conference be able to hear all 3 of those talkback mics?
Hello @judjohnson4640 this would be absolutely fine as the final console will be summing them together. The video includes Clear-Com's pinouts. Give me (Dan) a call if you want to discuss it further.
Hey, thanks for the question. The pin configuration changes when adapting from XLR to RJ45. In XLR, pin 1 is typically the ground, while in RJ45, pin 3 is often used for grounding. Adapting between these connectors requires adjusting the wiring to maintain proper signal flow and grounding.
4-wire question: If you had 3 audio consoles with each having a talkback mic, could you submix (sum) the talkback mics into a aux bus on one of the consoles and send that aux out to a 4-wire input port…and thus have everyone on that conference be able to hear all 3 of those talkback mics?
Hello @judjohnson4640 this would be absolutely fine as the final console will be summing them together. The video includes Clear-Com's pinouts. Give me (Dan) a call if you want to discuss it further.
Great video! Thanks!
Glad you liked it and that we could help!
about video 4:31 to 5:39 HelixNet XLR wire to RJ45 wire.Why is PIN1 grounded when using XLR , but PIN3 of XLR becomes grounded when changing to RJ45?
Hey, thanks for the question.
The pin configuration changes when adapting from XLR to RJ45.
In XLR, pin 1 is typically the ground, while in RJ45, pin 3 is often used for grounding.
Adapting between these connectors requires adjusting the wiring to maintain proper signal flow and grounding.