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2 Responses to “How To Connect Single and Dual Downlead Cables to Your Ops-Core AMP Communication Headset”
They are really amazing bits of gear… It is a shame that the AMP line is fairly offensively priced, even for most government departments. A complete system is very quickly $2,000+ here each with the correct down leads, PTT, arc brackets etc. Boss’ baulk at quotes including nearly any of their items. OH&S is a critical area, still have to justify why these are so much more efficient than much cheaper units that have some similar features. More effort, further justification required.
Configurable downleads. Cool. Idea to make it even better.
If one cable is attached: radio audio goes to both ears. Use case is a soldier listening to the tactical net that only needs one channel and can hear it in both ears.
If two cables are attached: left cable sends radio audio to left ear/ right cable radio audio to right ear. Use case: a leader who needs to monitor the fires or command channel in one ear while maintaining the tactical channel in the other ear.
The way I understand it, the audio from any cable will go to both ears. This gets hectic. Then you start adding dual-comm PTTs or two channel radios putting more than one channel on a single downlead…
They are really amazing bits of gear… It is a shame that the AMP line is fairly offensively priced, even for most government departments. A complete system is very quickly $2,000+ here each with the correct down leads, PTT, arc brackets etc. Boss’ baulk at quotes including nearly any of their items. OH&S is a critical area, still have to justify why these are so much more efficient than much cheaper units that have some similar features. More effort, further justification required.
Configurable downleads. Cool. Idea to make it even better.
If one cable is attached: radio audio goes to both ears. Use case is a soldier listening to the tactical net that only needs one channel and can hear it in both ears.
If two cables are attached: left cable sends radio audio to left ear/ right cable radio audio to right ear. Use case: a leader who needs to monitor the fires or command channel in one ear while maintaining the tactical channel in the other ear.
The way I understand it, the audio from any cable will go to both ears. This gets hectic. Then you start adding dual-comm PTTs or two channel radios putting more than one channel on a single downlead…