About the Shure FP11 Microphone-to-Line Amplifier
The Shure FP11 is a dedicated microphone-to-line amplifier engineered to provide clean, substantial gain for professional audio applications where microphone signals need to be boosted to line level over long distances. It addresses the common challenge of signal loss and noise pickup when running microphone-level cables over extended lengths, such as from a stage boundary mic to a distant control room or from a podium to a remote mixer. The unit accepts a balanced, low-impedance microphone input and delivers a balanced, transformer-isolated line-level output, offering up to 60 dB of adjustable gain. This powerful amplification ensures the signal arrives at its destination with ample strength and clarity, free from the hum and interference that can plague weak signals on long cable runs.
Designed for integration into fixed installation racks, the FP11 features a robust half-rack metal chassis with a straightforward front panel. Key operational elements include a precise gain control knob, an eight-segment LED bar-graph meter for accurate output level monitoring, and a recessed power switch. The transformer-isolated output is a critical feature, providing complete ground separation between input and output to eliminate ground loop hum and reject common-mode noise. This makes the unit exceptionally reliable in complex, multi-system audio environments like broadcast facilities, conference centers, and houses of worship.
The FP11 serves as a fundamental building block in professional audio system design, enhancing signal integrity and system flexibility. It is commonly used to amplify signals from lectern microphones, boundary layer mics on stages, or wireless receiver outputs before distribution to multiple consoles or recorders. By providing high-quality gain in a standalone device, it relieves the mixing console's preamplifiers from excessive gain duties and ensures optimal signal-to-noise ratio throughout the signal chain, making it an invaluable tool for maintaining audio quality in large-scale or distributed systems.