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lav mic cable SEVERED- fixable?
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Stuff happens; in this case, my cat chewed through the cable of my Tram TR50 lav mic in several different places. Both an electrician and an experienced audio engineer I showed this to said 'not fixable'.
So I've pretty accepted this unit is toast, but before I throw in the towel I thought I'd just ask here: has anyone ever attempted such a repair? With success or failure? thanks! |
You can send it to Tram and they can attach a new end connector at the point of the break. The cable going into the capsule end is not replacable so you'll end up with a mic with a shorter than normal cable So the big question becomes how much cable is left between the break and the mic - is it enough for the mic to be usable? From your pics it doesn't look like there's a lot of cable between the last chew point and the capsule.
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If you're going to toss it, I'll give you $20 for it. It's worth trying to fix, at least.
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Anyone worth their salt with a soldering iron and heat shrink tubing can fix that in 5 minutes. Even if the entire cable was hamburger, as long as there are both connectors with a good 2 inches of cable on each end, a length of new one can be spliced in.
If your options fail, contact me for a fix. 10 years on the road as a tv uplink engineer teaches you that there are NO cables that can't be fixed. |
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Thanks for the replies gentlemen, will follow up via PM
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Just happened to be looking at the repair service information on the Tram site just the other day and they claim there's no way to attach a new cable at the mic capsule end, that its strain relief is integral to the capsule body and must be attached as part of the capsule manufacturing process. They're happy to replace the connector or swap it for a different type but if the damage is too close to the capsule they say nothing can be done.
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Yeah, I saw that too Steve. Pardon my ignorance, is the capsule the microphone part?
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Not sure if you'd want to do this, but you could put a connector on the end that's 4" from the mic head and create a jumper cable. Pretty ultra-low budget fix, but it'd work.
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just splice it together. I've done this in the field 1" from a mic capsule with a sony ECM 44. the wire is a PITA to solder, but doable. send it to TREW audio in nashville if you can't do it - they can make up a new connecter end, mic wire, and splice it close....
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I have read there's a repair service somewhere in the UK that can repair Tram cable/head issues. Can't recall much more than that it wasn't cheap or I would have sent them a few with the usual intermittent cable/head connections.
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