On 05/18/2017 07:15 PM, Wayne DePrince Jr. wrote:
ahoy all,

i have been testing out a Zoom H5 which (along w/ the H6 for that matter) is advertised as NOT supporting passive instrument connections on the TRS inputs.  to quote the manual: "Direct input of passive guitars and basses is not supported."  thus i assumed that i would need a DI box/effect box/etc. to record well any directly connected passive electric guitar or bass.

however, when i connect my electric guitar (Lace Sensors and Alumitone pickups) and electric bass, both passive, to the TRS connections on inputs 1 & 2 of the H5 with gain only at 5 of 10, i get a good sound and strong signal, seemingly the same as when they are connected to an interface (in this case a Zoom U-44) that supports Hi-Z connections.

i first contacted Zoom support and they replied:

"There is no issue connecting a passive guitar to the 1/4" input on the H5.
There may only be an issue with level or noise, but if you are satisfied with the audio quality then there is no problem."

now while i do not yet have a good understanding of Lo vs. Hi-Z, i have read various posts about it. they seem to indicate that the passive guitar signal would lose some frequencies with this kind of connection and thus this setup is undesirable.

but again as it "sounds the same", i had some questions before investing in a DI box or getting a different interface:


so to summarize: is this an acceptable solution for recording a directly connected passive instrument (in this case an electric guitar and bass) even though the H5 does not officially support it?

thanks, w

PS: for those wondering the H5 works great w/ GNU+Linux as an audio interface


Hi. According to the Zoom HS specs, the input impedance on Mic/Line In is
 2 Kilo Ohms or more while Inputs 1/2 are 1.8 Kilo Ohms or more.

This is terrible for a guitar pickup.

The pickup's coil and the input impedance of the device it is plugged into
 form a low-pass filter. The higher the input impedance the better.
That's why guitar inputs are always 1 Mega Ohm or more.

But it is bad for another reason as well:
Most guitar pickups have between 6 and 12 Kilo Ohms resistance.
When fed into your 1.8 Kilo Ohms input, it forms a voltage divider
 which will severely lower the overall output of your pickup.

Get a DI box.
If you want the maximum possible frequency response and you
 want the most out of your pickups, get an active DI box.
It may introduce a bit more noise due to the active circuit.

On the other hand, if you want convenience of no batteries
 and just plug and go, get a passive DI box.
It may introduce a bit of noise due to non-linearity of the
 passive transformer, and the frequency response may not
 be as full or flat as an active DI box.
Mine is a Radial Engineering DI box. I am happy with it.
Even though the sound is slightly coloured by the
 passive transformer, it is far better than no DI box at all.

As for measuring the differences, that's a tough one.
I was able to see clearly a difference simply by using
 my oscilloscope and plucking strings.
With the guitar plugged into a 10 Kilo Ohm mixer input,
 I could clearly see less high frequency content (harmonics etc.)
 than with the guitar-to-scope alone. (The scope probe has
 1 Mega Ohm input impedance.)

A more scientific method might involve simultaneously
 recording the un-loaded pickup signal and the loaded
 signal and then comparing with software.

Tim.