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jayhartigan

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About jayhartigan

  • Birthday 08/03/1953

Profile Information

  • Location
    Haverford PA
  • About
    Production Sound Mixer Since 1977
  • Interested in Sound for Picture
    Yes

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  1. If you are in the US and have a HMa older than October 2018 running v1.01 be happy with it. Mine was working great but I like to keep everything updated so I did an update not noticing the e in the version number. Careless. There is no update for this transmitter. All newer HMa transmitters use version 6.xx. I suggest talking to Gerland at Lectro and he will be able to explain. Lectrosonics possibly will update the support website to this issue soon. Lesson learned. Do not try to update your older HMa. You'll end up sending it back to New Mexico to get it working again. My block 941 ended up in a much lower block and set to 50 MW only.
  2. I just updated my HMa to the export 1_04 by mistake. I didn't notice. Why is the correct version not on the website? I've called Lectro but no one is available right now. I guess I'll have to wait.
  3. Now that I’m here I find the City to City spreadsheet overstates the RF saturation in Atlanta. Block 20 Lectro 00-77 is full. (523.000-523.900) It’s clear 77-BA. BA-BD has RF to avoid (530.600-530.900). It’s clear from (530.900-536.100) BD-F1. F1-FF is unavailable. Not too bad.
  4. I'm hoping to pull one IFB and possibly two mics for close range use.
  5. Looking at the Excel sheet listing most major market cities it looks like block 20 is totally unavailable in Atlanta. Can anyone give any more information about Block 20 in Atlanta? City_by_City.xlsx
  6. Dean said that it's not repairable. It probably costs more to repair than just replace it. Jay
  7. I bought the RF Explorer Pro. That is the solution. Thanks
  8. I'll call Dean. This ISO9VOLT hasn't worked for some time. Of my 3, only this "new to me" isn't working. Thanks again Jay
  9. If the deceased unit proves to be bad, is it repairable? If it’s the fuse or diode I assume I can replace them but can I get this apart without breaking it?
  10. Larry, thanks for jumping in. Your last paragraph states my fear. Under load it dies. Tomorrow I will take your advice and try to find a resistor that will create a load and see how this little circuit behaves. With the loss of RadioShack it’s getting more difficult to find these parts. I’m hoping Micro Center offer such resistors. I am using two different UM 400s in this test and they both react the same for the good battery eliminator and the dead one. Of the two ISO9Volt units that I’ve owned for years, one has always worked in the various UM’s I stick them into. One died for a few hours today then came back to life. It appears the resetting fuse did it’s job. What is the the duration for this fuse to reset customarily? A third ISO9VOLT that I just recently bought used with a UM400 hasn’t worked since I pulled it from the reused Lectrosonics shipping package. The owner, a respected mixer in Canada assures me it worked for him. It reads 8.89V across the snap pins from either a BDS with a fresh battery reading 16.2V, or a CH12 sending 18.94V.
  11. I'm having trouble with a couple of these battery eliminators. Plugged into a CH-12 wall wort they meter at 8.9V. When plugged into the UM transmitter they don't even fire the LEDs. I received one that I bought used and it was DOA. I pulled another one from my kit and the UM worked. I pulled another one to test the first and then it too was DOA. I'm stumped. I think something caused this to occur quickly. One on them went from working to not, suddenly. These are not cheap ($157) and I'd rather tinker with it or send it but the financial crossover is obvious. Anyone have any ideas? Any Lectro fanatics on today?
  12. Currently I use a spare UCR411a to scan for my R1a IFB radios. I am building another IFB package for someone else and this seems an expensive way to find free space for R1a’s. Can anyone else recommend another way to scan one single Lectrosonics block? thanks Jay
  13. Yes, Joes is great stuff and I've never had a talent that didn't tolerate it. Moleskin day after day can cause some red bumps on some guys that shave their chest. Using alcohol wipes is what makes this work. Without cleaning the skin of the natural oils will not provide a good adhesion and the mic will fall off when you can least afford it. Also I use makeup wedges inserted along the transmitter antenna to keep the antenna from touching the fleshy part of the talent. This improves range dramatically.
  14. I have had a lot of success with applying COS-11 to actors non hairy chests. I always do a quick wipe with an alcohol wipe first to clean off any body oil or cream they may have applied then a sandwich of Joes Sticky stuff, COS-11 then a big patch of Moleskin. This should stay on all day easily. I usually let the talent remove the mic themselves as it sticks like a Bandaid. Speaking of Bandaids, the Bandaid brand fabric stick really well but some people are allergic to them. For the hairy chests I too either use a 3-4" square of Moleskin to minimize the noticeable application or use a smaller B6 along the collar. If the Tee shirt has a logo I'll put the mic right in the middle of the Moleskin under the logo or artwork. When all else fails I have plenty of Neopax chest straps. The mic sits inside an RM-11 which usually works if the talent is up to wearing it.
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