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KX-155 Audio Out

 
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txpilot



Joined: 26 Feb 2007
Posts: 87
Location: Houston, TX

PostPosted: Tue Mar 25, 2008 3:10 pm    Post subject: KX-155 Audio Out Reply with quote

I have a KX-155 and a Sigtronics Sport 200 intercom. I'm trying to figure out the proper wiring between units. The KX-155 has an 'audio hi' and 'audio lo' for both the comm and nav. I'm confused what is meant with the 'hi' and 'lo'.

Are the 'audio hi' connections supposed to go to the common blue intercom wire, common with the headset jacks, while the 'audio lo' connections go to ground? If that's the case, why must the 'audio lo' connections be shielded if it's going to ground anyway?

Thanks for your help!

Dan Ginty


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n801bh(at)NetZero.com
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PostPosted: Tue Mar 25, 2008 3:54 pm    Post subject: KX-155 Audio Out Reply with quote

I got tripped up on that term when I was wiring my experimental too. I have wired alot of car radios and other stuff growing up so the  Hi/ Lo thing seemed strange. Someone on this list straightened me out. The HI is really the hot wire or feed, the Low is just the ground. Why they don't call it that is beyond me..
do not archive
Ben Haas
N801BH
www.haaspowerair.com

-- "txpilot" <djg7(at)comcast.net> wrote:
--> AeroElectric-List message posted by: "txpilot" <djg7(at)comcast.net>

I have a KX-155 and a Sigtronics Sport 200 intercom. I'm trying to figure out the proper wiring between units. The KX-155 has an 'audio hi' and 'audio lo' for both the comm and nav. I'm confused what is meant with the 'hi' and 'lo'.

Are the 'audio hi' connections supposed to go to the common blue intercom wire, common with the headset jacks, while the 'audio lo' connections go to ground? If that's the case, why must the 'audio lo' connections be shielded if it's going to ground anyway?

Thanks for your help!

Dan Ginty


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nuckolls.bob(at)cox.net
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PostPosted: Wed Mar 26, 2008 3:16 am    Post subject: KX-155 Audio Out Reply with quote

At 11:49 PM 3/25/2008 +0000, you wrote:

Quote:
I got tripped up on that term when I was wiring my experimental too. I
have wired alot of car radios and other stuff growing up so the Hi/ Lo
thing seemed strange. Someone on this list straightened me out. The HI is
really the hot wire or feed, the Low is just the ground. Why they don't
call it that is beyond me..

do not archive
Ben Haas
N801BH
www.haaspowerair.com

-- "txpilot" <djg7(at)comcast.net> wrote:


I have a KX-155 and a Sigtronics Sport 200 intercom. I'm trying to figure
out the proper wiring between units. The KX-155 has an 'audio hi' and
'audio lo' for both the comm and nav. I'm confused what is meant with the
'hi' and 'lo'.

Are the 'audio hi' connections supposed to go to the common blue intercom
wire, common with the headset jacks, while the 'audio lo' connections go
to ground? If that's the case, why must the 'audio lo' connections be
shielded if it's going to ground anyway?

Thanks for your help!

Dan Ginty

Not all "LO" sides of signals paths are necessarily grounded.
I wasn't 'in the business' when the vernacular was adopted
and in any case, whoever conceived it probably used a reasonable
thought process. When one needs to identify power or signal
pathways and their functionality, a common vernacular is
seldom shared between disciplines. The electricians who wired
your house called them "line", "neutral" and "ground". In the
DC power world they might favor (+) and (-). In the AC signal
world the plus minus thing doesn't fit but there's still a need
to differentiate between the two wires for the purposes of
phasing. Hence the HI and LO thing. It's quite common for
the LO side of a path to get to ground somewhere in the system
but be totally floating in the far reaches of the wiring to
various components . . . it's that control-your-ground-loops
thing.

It can be frustrating but those are the cards that are
dealt to us. Without seeing the internal schematic for the
black boxes your trying to tie together, one cannot deduce
the rationale for shielding a LO side wire. I would guess
that it's because its simply the ac equivalent of a minus-side
in a DC circuit; intended to denote phasing and not
necessarily "ground".

I've had a few notes from readers over the years chiding
me for my "follow the instructions" recommendations for
answering questions on shield grounds. "Surely", they say,
"there must be some common rules of physics that can/should
guide us in all cases." The vernacular adopted by the
manufacturer's installation data and the designer's goals
for architecture are not necessarily common so the ultimate
map to Nirvana is the schematic. If a wire or shield is
shown to be connected in a particular manner, then it
matters not what it's called or how the shield or wire is
used. Schematics are the universal language in electronics
even if the symbols are sometimes a bit funny looking.

Bob . . .


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