Product specification SKM 100-835/845/865 G3

ARCHITECT’S
SPECIFICATIONS
The handheld vocal radio microphone shall
be for use with a companion receiver as
part of a wireless RF transmission system.
The radio microphone shall operate within six
UHF frequency ranges, each with a 42 MHz
switching bandwidth: 516 558 MHz,
566
608 MHz, 626 668 MHz, 734 –776 MHz,
780 822 MHz, 823 865 MHz; transmissi-
on frequencies shall be 1,680 per range and
shall be tunable in 25 kHz steps. The radio
microphone shall feature 20 fixed frequency
banks with up to 12 compatible frequency
presets and 1 user bank with up to 12 user
programmable frequencies.
Nominal/peak deviation shall be ±24 kHz/
±48 kHz. Frequency stability shall be
±15 ppm. RF output power at 50 O shall
be 30 mW (typical).
The radio microphone shall incorporate
the Sennheiser HDX compander system
and a defeatable pilot tone squelch. Audio
frequency response shall range from
80 18,000 Hz. Signal-to-noise ratio at 1 mV
and peak deviation shall be 110 dBA.
Total harmonic distortion (THD) shall be
0.9 %. Input sensitivity shall be adjustable
within a 48 dB range in steps of 6 dB.
The radio microphone shall be menu-driven
with a backlit LC display showing the cur-
rent frequency, frequency bank and channel
number, metering of AF level, transmission
status, lock status, pilot tone transmission,
muting function, and battery status. An au-
to-lock feature shall be provided to prevent
settings from being accidentally altered.
The radio microphone parameters shall be
programmable in the radio microphone
menu. Receiver parameters such as receiving
frequency, receiver name and pilot tone
setting shall be synchronizable with the
radio microphone via an integrated infrared
interface.
Continued on page 3
SKM 100-835 G3, SKM 100-845 G3, SKM 100-865 G3 Handheld vocal radio microphone
TECHNICAL DATA
Modulation ...............................................................wideband FM
RF frequency ranges............................................... 516 558, 566 608, 626 668,
734 –776, 780 822, 823 865 MHz
Transmission frequencies ..................................... 1,680 frequencies, tuneable in steps
of 25 kHz
20 frequency banks, each with up
to 12 factory preset channels
1 frequency bank with up to 12
user programmable channels
Switching bandwidth .............................................42 MHz
Nominal/peak deviation .......................................±24 kHz/±48 kHz
Frequency stability ................................................ ±15 ppm
RF output power at 50 O ......................................typ. 30 mW
Pilot tone squelch ...................................................can be switched off
Compander system .................................................Sennheiser HDX
AF frequency response ..........................................80 18,000 Hz
Signal-to-noise-ratio (1mV, peak deviation) ... 110 dBA
Total harmonic distortion (THD) ......................... 0.9 %
Adjustment range of input sensitivity ..............48 dB, adjustable in 6-dB steps
Temperature range .................................................−10°C to +55°C
Power supply............................................................ 2 AA size batteries, 1.5 V or
BA 2015 accupack
Nominal voltage ......................................................2.4 V
Current consumption:
at nominal voltage .................................................typ. 180 mA (30 mW)
with switched-off radio microphone .................. 25 µA
Operating time ........................................................typ. 8 hrs
Dimensions ............................................................... approx. Ø 50 mm (2“)
x 265 mm (10.4“)
Weight (incl. batteries) .........................................approx. 450 g (15.9 oz)
SKM 100-835 G3
Transducer/microphone type ..............................dynamic
AF sensitivity ...........................................................2.1 mV/Pa
Sound pressure level (SPL) ...................................154 dB(SPL) max.
Pick-up pattern ........................................................cardioid
Continued on page 3