Church Sound: Passive & Active Direct Boxes, And How They Should Be Used
"DI" is variously claimed to stand for direct input, direct injection or direct interface -- but whatever you choose to call them, these devices are handy problem solvers
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This article is provided by Behind The Mixer.

 
A DI unit, DI box, Direct Box or simply DI is an electronic device that connects a high impedance line level signal that has an unbalanced output (a.k.a., a piece of equipment) to a low impedance mic level balanced input, usually via XLR connector.

DIs are frequently used to connect an electric guitar, electronic piano, or electric bass to a mixing console’s microphone input.

The DI performs level matching, balancing, and either active buffering or passive impedance bridging to minimize noise, distortion, and ground loops. DIs do not perform impedance matching.

DI (pronounced dee EYE, not “DIE” as in “die feedback, die!”) is variously claimed to stand for direct input, direct injection or direct interface. DI units are used with professional and semi-professional PA systems and sound recording studios.

The basic component of a DI unit is a step-down transformer. Transformers consist of two or more wires that wind many times around a metal core. The ends of each coil of wire protrude from the windings; one pair of ends is the input, and the other pair is the output. The input coil is called the primary, and the output coil is called the secondary.

When an electrical signal through the primary coil, it creates a magnetic field around the coil. The field then induces an analogous signal in the secondary coil, which appears at the output leads.

If the primary has more windings than the secondary, it is called a step-down transformer because the signal level and impedance are lower at the output than they are at the input.

If the secondary has more windings than the primary, it is called a step-up transformer because the signal level and impedance are higher at the output; however, the power does not increase with respect to the input. Step-up transformers are used at the input stage of mic preamps and adapters to connect a microphone to a line-level or guitar-amp input.

Types: active DI units and passive DI units

Passive DI Units
A passive DI unit typically consists of an audio transformer used as a balun. Typical turns ratio is about 500:1, to match a nominal 50 kOhm signal source such as the magnetic pickup of an electric guitar to a 100-Ohm input.

Less commonly, a passive DI unit may consist of a resistive load, with or without capacitor coupling. Such units are best suited to outputs designed for headphones or loudspeakers.

Cheaper passive DI units are more susceptible to hum. Passive units also tend to be less versatile than active. However, batteries are not required, they are simple to use, and the better units are extremely reliable.

Some models have no settings, while others can have a ground lift switch (to avoid ground loop problems) and a pad switch (to accommodate different source levels). Some passive DI units also have a filter switch for coloring the sound.


Comments (2) Most recent displayed first
Posted by flow  on  07/31/11  at  06:31 PM
http://www.deltamedia.com/resource/impedance.html
Posted by flow  on  07/31/11  at  06:28 PM
you say that DI boxes "do not" perform impedance matching, then go on to describe how they change the impedance.

my understanding was that their main purpose is to match the impedance, along with balancing the signal. a quick web search "DI impedance matching" bring up a lot of results supporting this.

where is the authoritative source?

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