T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1835.1 | Try the NE Aquarium for info | DKAS::SPENCER | | Thu Feb 27 1992 09:32 | 6 |
| Gregg,
Call the NE Aquarium. If that doesn't lead to anything, send me mail and
I'll put you in touch with one of their project directors.
J.
|
1835.2 | Depths of Education... | MILKWY::WAGNER | Scott | Thu Feb 27 1992 10:32 | 8 |
|
Or Woods Hole, or Scripps...
I believe this is gonna run $$$$$ unless it can be borrowed...
Sounds like fun, tho!
Scott.
|
1835.3 | Try Benthos, Falmouth, MA | HANNAH::SEARS | Paul Sears, DSG1-2/E6, dtn 235-8452 | Thu Feb 27 1992 11:57 | 13 |
| I have a friend in Falmouth, MA who used to work at WHOI (as did I once
upon a time...). Although he was a programmer in the Geophysics dept,
he fanagled a crew position on a 50' motorsailor whose purpose was to
go to Stellwagon to listen to whales! Beats writing siesmic plotting
programs... Send me mail and i'll give you his #.
Also try Sipican Corp, in Marion. They do lotsa underwater stuff.
Also try Benthos Corp, in Falmouth. They also do lotsa u/w stuff,
including video and audio...
paul
|
1835.4 | | CHRCHL::GERMAIN | Improvise! Adapt! Overcome! | Thu Feb 27 1992 12:51 | 6 |
| Thanks!
A book I read said that the cost for the mikes range from 30 to
hundreds of dollars.
Gregg
|
1835.5 | try Scientific American | SAINT::STCLAIR | | Thu Feb 27 1992 13:52 | 6 |
|
You'llhave to go back several year but they had an article in the
Amature Scientist that told how to make them from scratch. It wasn't
to hard.
|
1835.6 | Possible source for hydrophone | SUBSYS::CHESTER | | Thu Feb 27 1992 18:08 | 43 |
| One source is Edmund Scientific. They have the mic at a reasable price
and an amplifier for a outragious price.
From the current catalog #12N1
Hydrophone Microphone Head
Freq response: 10 to 60000 hz 64 db. 61 db 10 to 2000 hz
Impedance: Low will operate into bot high and low impedance inputs
Operating depth: 300 ft. max depth without damage 360 ft.
Hydrophone Microphone head A41,759 $23.95
Underwater hydrophone
Kit includes underwater mic with 20ft of cable
Specs the same as above
Earphones
Amplifier
Input impedance 4.7megohms across 100pf
output power 0.5 w rms
freq response 52 db 100 hz -20 Khz
Battery 9v Alkaline type
Voltage gain input to headphone jack at full volume 70db.
23db to tape out jack
Case plastic 1x2x3 inches 5 oz with battery
Hydrophone A38,095 $250.00
Edmund Scientific Company
101 E. Gloucester pike
Barrington, NJ. 08007-1380
609-573-62500
I have used the mic with a home made amp. It works well. The main
limitation is you will hear power boats for miles around. Also you
must drift or anchore as the flow noise will hide the fish sounds.
With mic they send you instruction on how to comnnect the cable to the
mic. If you want to use it a depths greater than I think 30 feet the
mic must be put into a oil filled conatiner such as plastic ketchup
bottle.
Give me call If you need any other info. 237-6561
|
1835.7 | Whales don't sing of NE | SUBSYS::CHESTER | | Thu Feb 27 1992 18:11 | 5 |
| Oh the other bit of info. Is the whales don't sing here. Just off of
South America. That was what the guide on a whale watch boat told me.
Ken C
|
1835.8 | | CHRCHL::GERMAIN | Improvise! Adapt! Overcome! | Fri Feb 28 1992 08:39 | 8 |
| Ken,
REALLY? Wow, they don't sing in the Northeast? Not even the humpbacks?
I wonder why? Could be an irrascible audience - you know them New
Englanders... :^)
Gregg
|
1835.10 | | MSCSSE::BERENS | Alan Berens | Fri Feb 28 1992 09:04 | 5 |
| re .9:
How 'bout heaving to? Hove to the sails don't luff (at least in a strong
wind) and it isn't difficult either to heave to or get back under way.
|
1835.11 | cheap alternative (junior high science project) | DKAS::SPENCER | | Fri Feb 28 1992 10:46 | 11 |
| Hmmm...any chance you could fabricate the audio equivalent of a
glass-bottom boat? I've heard whale and dolphin squeaks and squeals from
inside a fiberglass hull underway in calm conditions (no engine running,
of course). Perhaps you could make a box to put over the side, with a
bottom of thin material, on which could be mounted a regular microphone.
A slight loss in fidelity might be made up for by the amp and the >$200
savings.
Just a thought....
John.
|
1835.12 | | CHRCHL::GERMAIN | Improvise! Adapt! Overcome! | Fri Feb 28 1992 10:48 | 22 |
| Alan,
Well what I had in mind was to slow down and do some scanning as I was
sailing out there. I just want to:
Slow down
Listen (maybe record)
Speed up.
And it's simpler to just ease the sheets and sail inefficiently.
Now, when I want to hang around, then your idea is better.
BTW, I want to connect the hydrophone to, say, something as simple as
a Walkman or portable cassette. That allows you to listen with the
headphones as you record.
is there a better idea?
Gregg
|
1835.13 | | CHRCHL::GERMAIN | Improvise! Adapt! Overcome! | Fri Feb 28 1992 10:50 | 10 |
| John,
For that matter, I could try a regular mike encased in an inflated
balloon (weighted of course). I figured I might try this, but one of
the books I read sugested that the fidelity loss would be too high.
Also, it said you have to get the mike (whatever it is) down about 10
feet. They wrote that somehow that cuts out a lot of surface noise.
Gregg
|
1835.14 | Some more info and observations | SUBSYS::CHESTER | | Fri Feb 28 1992 12:29 | 24 |
| The flow noise is mostly due to the simple microphone enclosures and
the cable. The plastic bottles have ridges which generate turbulance.
The other source of noise is the cable itself. The common vinyl
covered microphone cable is a great conductor of sound. I guess a
rubber covered cable would be better. The other source of flow noise
is the rolling of the boat.
The one I have has a short (about 30 ft cable made out of vinyl) so
it is not long enough to get below the thermocline layer. One of the
winter projects is to replace the cable with a rubber covered one.
The main problem with just putting a mic in a bag inthe water is the
hydostatic pressure. A typical mic has a small hole in the back to
equalize the air pressure. If put into water with out any way
for the prussure to equalize the mis will be destroyed. The pressure
is about 0.43 lb per in squared per foot of depth
There where three articles in Scienfic American over the last 20 years
on how to build hydrophones. I have copies if any one in intrested.
One other use for a hydrophone is the find krill. Bait fish
eat these and the Bluefish eat the bait fish.
|
1835.15 | | CHRCHL::GERMAIN | Improvise! Adapt! Overcome! | Fri Feb 28 1992 12:57 | 4 |
| If the mike was in an inflated bag, the pressure would equalize to the
bag pressure, would it not?
Gregg
|
1835.16 | Just a thought!!! | FSOA::SLIEKER | | Fri Feb 28 1992 15:51 | 6 |
| I would suggest feeding your audio through an inexpensive automotive
(12V) equalizer, at least 5 band. This would allow you to discriminate
and boost the spectrum your looking for, effectively enhancing what
is probably a marginal S/N ratio. Considering the probable lack of
linearity in such an inexpensive microphone and probable high back-
ground noise level you'll need all the help you can get...
|
1835.17 | | CHRCHL::GERMAIN | Improvise! Adapt! Overcome! | Fri Feb 28 1992 15:55 | 5 |
| Hmmm, doesn't the range of sounds (at least from a humpback) span both
ends of the human hearing spectrum? I thought they made low frequency
noises as well as way up past the sonic range.
Gregg
|
1835.18 | Basic noise cancelling system... | FSOA::SLIEKER | | Fri Feb 28 1992 16:32 | 23 |
| They may very well but the more bands you have the better able you are
to contour the response of the system. Chances are the white noise is
fairly wide band while the target emissions may be relatively narrow
band. You could boost the narrow band filter and hopefully keep the
majority of the white noise suppressed. For more serious filtering
you would have to record the emissions and digitally filter. Very
expensive equipment needed here. Another thought for technologically
manageable filtering is noise-cancelling mike system is a significant
amount of noise is generated at the surface or elsewhere away from
the deep mike. You would need two mikes, a mixer (simple diode is fine)
and an inverting amplifier. The mikes should be impedence matched BTW.
The deep mike would drive one of the mixer inputs and the shallow
mike (say right under the boat) would feed through a unity gain
inverting amplifier (about 5-8 parts and $10 at Radio/Shack) to
the other mixer input. Hum! scatch what I said about a simple
diode mixer, you might need to adjust the gain ratio. A mixer
with input gain control is needed. Lots of white noise will
get into the shallow mike from the boat waves etc, but it will
be inverted (180 d phase shifted) so it will cancel any of the
same noise getting down to the deep mike in real time. By adjusting
the gain of one of the channels you would optimize the noise
canceling effect. The more I think about this the niftier it
sounds, if you'll excuse the pun....
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1835.19 | FM Mike in a balloon | TOOK::MCINNES | | Mon Mar 02 1992 09:33 | 3 |
| I wonder if one of those radio mikes (mike with fm transmitter) in a
balloon would work. There would be no cable noise. Tie a string to
the balloon, weight the balloon and let it sink to the required depth.
|
1835.20 | Hey big Balleens, we'll see YOU later! | MILKWY::WAGNER | Scott | Mon Mar 02 1992 11:26 | 7 |
|
Unfortunately, nope.
And towing just about anything is gonna be noisy- I like the listen-
and-stop idea...
Scott
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1835.21 | Water=Shield | SUBSYS::CHESTER | | Mon Mar 02 1992 17:32 | 10 |
| REF .-2
The salt water makes an effective shield for rf. The only frequencies
that can pentrate are in the low Khz range. The Navy runs a a large
megawatt xmitter in Maine to contact deep running submarines.
I will let you know how the rubber cable works.
Ken C
|
1835.22 | whale facts | SMAUG::MORENZ | JoAnne Morenz IBM I /C Eng. 226-5870 | Wed Mar 25 1992 16:07 | 14 |
|
Whales migrate to the Northeast in the spring time ( you can see them regularly
off Stellwagon Bank ~ April ). The humpbacks, finbacks and minkes are here to
EAT :-). They cruise back down to the sterile, warm Carribean waters, and farther
south to find a mate and calve their babies around October.
Singing is primarily an activity associated with mating, so I doubt you will
pick up much in the whale melody department around here I am afraid.
Good Luck though,
JoAnne (former NE Aquarium whalewatch volunteer)
|