🎤 Elevate Your Sound Game!
The Rolls Mini Microphone Preamp (MP13) is a compact, single-channel mic preamp designed for professionals on the move. Weighing just 1.1 pounds and measuring 5x5x5 inches, it offers a lightweight solution for high-quality audio recording. With a voltage of 3.7 volts, this preamp is perfect for enhancing your sound without the hassle of complex setups.
Item Dimensions | 5 x 5 x 5 inches |
Item Weight | 1.1 Pounds |
Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
Reusability | Single Use |
Voltage | 3.7 Volts |
J**R
Great all-in-one solution for a powered (condenser) mic with amplification
I bought this for my son who uses his pc to game. He has one of the inexpensive Neweer condenser microphones that came with an arm and power supply from Amazon. The mic levels were always too low with just the power supply because it doesn't amplify. This supplies both the phantom power and perfectly amplified the microphone. And it's less expensive than the in-line amps while being good enough for gaming.
M**N
Works well on computer microphones with a caveat
This works well for PC/Laptop microphone volume control.HOWEVER... You do need a lot of connectors because there is a dark little secret about most computer microphones most people do not know.If you ever looked at a computer microphone connector, you've probably realized that it has a 1/8th inch TRS connector. On headphones or speakers these 3 contacts are: Right-Channel / Left-Channel / Common-Ground.These 3 connectors are different on PC microphones and the microphones on headsets(headphones with a microphone attached). For these types of microphones the contacts are as follows: Microphone Signal / +5 volts / Common-Ground. You see, computer microphones need to be energized with around +5v to work properly. Otherwise the sound signal they produce is very VERY bad and weak.I bring this up because the Rolls MP13 amplifier here is designed for 1 channel microphones that DO NOT NEED TO BE ENERGIZED! This means if you just plug a computer micropone(or headset microphone) into the Rolls MP13 input and then connect the output directly to your sound card's Microphone Input: You will get a horrible array of loud random noises sent into your microphone line and it will seem like the Roll MP13 is broken.If you wish to use the Rolls MP13 as a computer microphone amplifier you need to split the Microphone signal and the +5 volt line.1) The +5 volt line must go directly from your soundcard to the +5 volt line on your microphone.2) The Microphone Signal line from your soundcard must be connected to the OUTPUT of the Rolls MP13 amplifier. The Microphone Signal connection from the MICROPHONE must be connected to the INPUT of the Rolls MP13 amplifier.If this is confusing to you, you should NOT try to use the Rolls MP13 on a computer microphone.
A**R
I feel bad for the people whose items came with electronics problems ...
No issues at all. I feel bad for the people whose items came with electronics problems because I get a nice clear sound out of mine and it's exactly what I need for home recording.However, the jacks are not what I would call an ideal configuration. For output, you have an XLR and a 1/4 inch. For input, you have an XLR and an 1/8 inch. Why is the input not a 1/4 inch? I don't know. Since 1/8-/14 adapters are very common, I think it would be easier to have both jacks be 1/4 inch. But they're not. So just keep that in mind if you're buying with the intention of recording guitar tracks via direct input. Otherwise, great product.
J**K
extremely noisy
this pre-amp introduces a huge amount of hiss to the audio signal
R**Z
Good mic preamp
I’m using this between a dynamic mic and an inexpensive tripath amp and the sound is fine for voice use. Does exactly what I wanted it to and a lot cheaper and robust than a diy pre-amp project.
B**T
It works but not great
My use-case is voice and for that this has a very high noise floor. Sound quality and gain are fine otherwise though.Output impedance is not listed in the datasheet but it's about 100 Ω and is AC coupled---except for the "clipping" detector. That last part is important if you are plugging this into a laptop or phone, as I do, since the voltage from those devices (used for electret microphones) may create a false clipping indication. In this case just ignore it.The instructions claim that it will drive stereo headphones but be aware that only the left channel will have sound. I was thinking that something was wrong but, in fact, the jack itself is a true mono jack with only two contacts; no ring connection at all. This particular model of jack does incorporate an internal switch but it is not used nor connected in this circuit.The pot, a little unbranded 10k job, is a bit scratchy in spots. I may try DeoxIT sometime.This unit comes with a wall wort but if you are going to buy or build a power supply mind the polarity: center is negative. To avoid ground loops (hum) try to use an isolated supply. Batteries would be fine.Finally, the Noise:This is a two stage amp with the first being an instrumentation amplifier comprised of two op-amps. The op-amps used are inside a 4560's. Those have fair voltage noise of 8 mV/√Hz but current noise is unspecified. For a dynamic preamp this can usually be ignored since these mics are only around 200 Ω and large current noise amounts to near nothing. In this design, however, there are two large 10 kΩ resistors in series with the mic (R4 & R6). I'm not sure why they are there but they add thermal noise and make the current noise significant. I found that shunting them drops the noise by 6 dB! With the shunt, op-amps like LM833 or LM4562 would likely do better still but with the 10 k's in place even an expensive FET op-amp wouldn't help too much.
C**E
Does What It's Supposed To Do At a Good Price
I bought this so I could use my XLR microphone in online settings. It was reasonably priced and works well for that purpose. There is no noise added to the sound that I've been able to detect.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
1 month ago