pretty cool project. I had always wanted to do this with a rotary phone and have it toggle on and off when you picked it up/put it down. Had also thought about buying and using an old office phone with a screen and replacing it so you could display PC thermals, weather, etc. on it.
That's why I just buy the condenser mic capsules (which cost cents) and build them a tiny class A voltage amplifier that drives the microphones and uses a 12V source. Then the output goes to my pc at the line in and I get barely -50dB of noise in voice meter banana and good sound quality... For dirt cheap.
This would be cool for just making phone calls since landline phones are way more comfortable to hold than smartphones are. I noticed that the mic was peaking when you first tested it so maybe you should adjust the gain lower so it doesn't peak so much if you didn't do that already. Anyway it's a great video! :) Edit: oh yeah just remembered that you should try to add the keypad back (maybe remove it from the pcb and tape it in place or something) so it doesn't have a big hole in the middle.
pretty cool project. I had always wanted to do this with a rotary phone and have it toggle on and off when you picked it up/put it down. Had also thought about buying and using an old office phone with a screen and replacing it so you could display PC thermals, weather, etc. on it.
That’s cool! It legit sounds better than my Yeti mic lol
if you have to you can use them for stereo, though no hands free for gaming :D
also if you iron your greenscreen it works even better
That's why I just buy the condenser mic capsules (which cost cents) and build them a tiny class A voltage amplifier that drives the microphones and uses a 12V source. Then the output goes to my pc at the line in and I get barely -50dB of noise in voice meter banana and good sound quality... For dirt cheap.
Bruh. Btw, that sounds better than AirPods pro
This would be cool for just making phone calls since landline phones are way more comfortable to hold than smartphones are. I noticed that the mic was peaking when you first tested it so maybe you should adjust the gain lower so it doesn't peak so much if you didn't do that already. Anyway it's a great video! :)
Edit: oh yeah just remembered that you should try to add the keypad back (maybe remove it from the pcb and tape it in place or something) so it doesn't have a big hole in the middle.
thats so cool XD