A while back, I got a Sony ECM LV1 Lavalier Microphone, which is really two separate microphones in a common housing in a stereo configuration. On paper, at least, this is a good fit for my GoPro Hero 9 with a Media Mod, as it is capable of stereo recording. But every time I rode at highway speeds, the audio track would be full of pops and clicks, leaving the audio unusable. I made my own inline attenuator, which did drop the volume of the recording, but the audio still had pops and clicks at highway speeds. This had me blaming the mic, so I decided to build my own dual mic setup.
One goal was to have the ability to do stereo recording, like I could with the Sony mic. When recording inside a helmet, one could argue that the stereo effect will be minimal, but if GoPros and other action cameras can do stereo recording, why not do stereo recording? I wanted some distance between the microphones, with each on it's own side of the helmet to maximize the difference between what each mic records.
I also wanted a microphone that could handle a high volume of sound. It's difficult to find maximum SPL ratings for electret microphone capsules, but after some research, I found that the PUIAudio AOM-5035L-HD3-R is rated for a maximum SPL of 135 dB. This means that if what I'm hearing while riding isn't hurting my ears, the microphones should be ok. What I'm not sure of is whether that rating is how loud the sound can be before damage occurs to the mic, or if that's how loud a sound can be with good-enough audio quality. (See the datasheet for the AOM-5035L here.)
After ordering the microphone capsules, I wanted to house them in something that was long enough to make mounting the microphones easy. I also wanted to limit how much the wires could move near the solder joints to prevent cracking those joints. I decided to use a couple 1/4" copper plumbing fittings. The capsules did not fit initially, but were close. After a little bit of drilling, they fit well enough.
This means the recommended source follower setup is not an option. However connecting the source terminal directly to ground basically converts a three-terminal electret capsule into a 2-terminal one. This was my initial plan.
However, I didn't want to simply bridge the two terminals with solder. A common-source gain stage typically has much more than unity gain, and if that lead to clipping, I wanted to be able to add a resistor between source and ground to lower the gain. If the ratio of the drain resistor to the source resistor is one, unity gain can be achieved (or possibly less than unity gain.) More on this later. Also, having a wire for each terminal could mean wiring to source follower stages that I build myself in an external amplifier with output characteristics for using the line-in setting on the GoPro.
After soldering, I added some hot clue for some mechanical support to the solder connections. I definitely want to avoid bending at those connections, which could lead to broken solder joints.
I then put each capsule into its "housing", filled the inside with more hot glue, soldered the wires to the output jack, and heat shrinking everything along the way.
I knew I had to reduce the gain to eliminate clipping. I knew that with a source-follower topology suggested by the data sheet, unity gain would probably be best. I tried various resistors between source and ground for each microphone, and using 5.1kΩ resistors worked well.
Hopefully soon, I'll post a video demonstrating how well the microphones work.
Here it is plugged into the GoPro with a short cable I made. |