Pictreed Posted June 7, 2016 Report Posted June 7, 2016 I'm trying to fly my plane to another airport to have the radios worked on so I have to use a hand-held radio but when I connect my Lightspeed headset to my Icom with the adapter they sell I get the high pitch feedback sound you get when you put a microphone too close to a speaker. Tried adjusting squelch, hold radio behind me, and other things. If I hold it horizontal right in front of me it stops. I tried turning off noise cancelling too. It happens inside or outside the plane. Any ideas? I'm going to try an A20 headset tonight and see if it still happens. Tim Quote
Marauder Posted June 7, 2016 Report Posted June 7, 2016 1 hour ago, Pictreed said: I'm trying to fly my plane to another airport to have the radios worked on so I have to use a hand-held radio but when I connect my Lightspeed headset to my Icom with the adapter they sell I get the high pitch feedback sound you get when you put a microphone too close to a speaker. Tried adjusting squelch, hold radio behind me, and other things. If I hold it horizontal right in front of me it stops. I tried turning of noise cancelling too. It happens inside or outside the plane. Any ideas? I'm going to try an A20 headset tonight and see if it still happens. Tim Do you have your cell phone on you when this is happening? Quote
Pictreed Posted June 7, 2016 Author Report Posted June 7, 2016 Not a cell phone issue...I think. Let me test that idea. So far I think it's an issue with the Zulu 2 headset. The Bose worked fine. Not sure if it's just the way the headset is or if there's a problem with them. But I'll also hold the phone near the Bose and see if I can recreate the issue. Quote
Piloto Posted June 7, 2016 Report Posted June 7, 2016 Try lowering the volume on the Icom and the headsets. Keep the Icom away from the microphone. The Icom speaker may not be completely muted when the headset is plugged. José Quote
Pictreed Posted June 7, 2016 Author Report Posted June 7, 2016 I just found a few articles that say that Icom radios produce the RF problem. Ferrite loops get rid of it so I assume the Bose has it built in :-/ So if you're using your Icom as a backup radio with your Lightspeed or David Clark headset it may not work...my plane looked like a Pong game on my iPad as I turned away from the Class D airspace today when they didn't respond...lol. I will keep a set of Bose with me. I might like them better...who knows. There should be some electrical engineers here, right? Is there a way to fix this? Can you get a really large ferrite 'ring' and wrap your wires through it? Tim Quote
Pictreed Posted June 7, 2016 Author Report Posted June 7, 2016 22 minutes ago, Piloto said: Try lowering the volume on the Icom and the headsets. Keep the Icom away from the microphone. The Icom speaker may not be completely muted when the headset is plugged. José Ya lo hice. That's what I thought but it didn't work. Tim Quote
N601RX Posted June 7, 2016 Report Posted June 7, 2016 Your Light Speed headset has a mic gain on it. Turn it down some. If I remember correctly it's a small screw under the mic cover. If this causes the regular radio to be too low there is a mic gain on the audio panel to compensate. Its possible your handheld might have the adjustment also. Quote
Pictreed Posted June 7, 2016 Author Report Posted June 7, 2016 There are dip switches that have gain control. I may try one of those. Tim Quote
N601RX Posted June 7, 2016 Report Posted June 7, 2016 Look for an adjustable pot or removable cover near the mic. Slide the windscreen cover back. On the Lightspeeds I have owned the dipswitches didn't control the mic gain. Its usually a variable adjustment. Quote
Pictreed Posted June 8, 2016 Author Report Posted June 8, 2016 Tried the pot switch. Bose still works flawless. Quote
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