Wireless microphones, Ceiling microphones - quality vs convenience – Polycom C16 User Manual

Page 470

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Design Guide for the Polycom SoundStructure C16, C12, C8, and SR12

B - 8

Wireless Microphones

Wireless microphones are also commonly used in conferencing applications,

particularly for presenters. The advantage of wireless microphones is that

they may be used anywhere within the room (depending on whether in-room

sound reinforcement is used with that microphone) and have the advantage

that they are usually closer to the local talker's mouth than a tabletop

microphone. It is better to use a lavalier style of wireless microphone than a

hand-held wireless microphone to ensure that the microphone stays a constant

distance from the talker's mouth which will minimize the sound level

variation to the remote participants in a conferencing application. Wireless

handheld microphones typically end up being placed on tables, used as

pointing devices, and end up in other situations that reduce the quality of the

resulting audio signal. One consideration with lavalier microphones is to

ensure the users of the microphones understand where to attach the

microphone to minimize the occurrence of fabric being dragged across the

microphone element.
There are different methods of transmission that wireless microphones use,

ranging from analog transmission over UHF or VHF frequencies to digital

encrypted transmissions over a 2 GHz frequency band. Considerations for

choosing a wireless microphone include the signal bandwidth that is

transmitted (narrow or wide band), the latency introduced by the wireless

microphone, the battery type and life (rechargeable or not), reliable

transmission distances, cost, freedom from interference, and whether it uses

encryption to secure the wireless channel.

Ceiling Microphones - Quality vs Convenience

In all applications, getting the microphone closer to the local talker results in a

higher quality signal due to improved signal-to-noise ratio (the local talker is

louder compared to the background noise) and a reduction in the amount of

the multipath signal compared to the original signal.

In most conferencing applications there is a trade-off with the usage of a room,

the location and configuration of the furniture, and the maximum achievable

audio quality. It is common for rooms with movable furniture to not have

permanently installed microphones on the tables. To accommodate this,

microphones are often moved away from the participants and placed in the

ceiling. A consequence of this is that the resulting signal picked up by the

microphone includes significant amount of additional noise sources that are

closer to the microphone than the talker such as HVAC. In addition, the local

talker's mouth will be farther from the microphone, reducing the signal level

that is picked up by the microphone. Any additional gain added to pick up

the local talker's signal will also amplify the background noise, exacerbating

the problem.
To set proper expectations, demonstrate the audio quality of a ceiling

microphone in the target room as early in the design process as possible. This

can be done simply by temporarily hanging a microphone from a ceiling with

tape or some other temporary adhesive, and running the microphone cable to

a location acoustically isolated from where the microphone is temporarily

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This manual is related to the following products:

C8, SR12, C12