SOURCE: mic wiring
Hello, In case you haven't found it yet, here is for a 2510/ which is a cousin of a radio.
1 - Modulation/ Audio/ White
2 - Ground/ Shield
3 - Transmit/ Red
4 - up button/ NC
5 - down button/ NC
Thats if the D104 is a 4 wire, Mechanic
SOURCE: 148 gtl 5pin
Looking from inside the radio at the mic jack, with the nub down. Starting from the left is pin 1, pin 2, pin 3, pin 4, and pin 5.
here is the colors that should be attached to each.
1 is white.
2 is sheild.
3 is black.
4 is red.
5 is blue.
Hope this helps. Take care in soldering. It is easier to reach the pins if you remove the 4 screws that hold the face plate on. Be careful not to pull another wire from somewhere.
SOURCE: I have a astatic d104
If you bought the mic new it came with a sheet telling what wires do what, most of those are six wire mics.
In your radio: 1=shield, 2=audio,3=transmit, 4=receive.
On most astatic mics shield is braided shield wire, audio is white, transmit is red and blue is receive.
The other two wires should be yellow and black, the yellow will not be needed and you may have to connect the black to either pin one or pin 4.
Best way to do this is wire the shield and receive first and connect mic, if you have receive, then go for the audio and transmit.
There are a couple of versions of this radio so you may have to experiment to get it right, Keep the solder connections neat and the wire short.
Let me know with a comment here if you have questions.
SD TECH
SOURCE: I have a 1990 cobra 148 GTL with 5 pin
The wiring is not likely to be the same.
The information on the radio is here:
http://www.cbtricks.com/radios/cobra/148gtl/index.htm
You will likely need to open up the mic to identify what your wires connect to to determine the correct oreintation. it is possible too you may find one of the models listed was used by Barjan and is nothing more than a rebranded microphone.
502 views
Usually answered in minutes!
×