It would seem that nobody has been posting them. Have at it to bring it back. Hopefully some other people will help you out.
Interesting feature that it was, it's viewership and people voting in it were not a lot like 6 out of 279 members which frustrated me. Also, it was never meant to be Brian's question of the day, it was "the" question of the day meaning from all of us. Sure it would be really easy for me to be the grand inquisitor but it would be by far better for all of you to do the questions for each other in addition to any that I added. I kept warning that I was going to bring my questions to a close unless more people were interested. More people were not and I followed
thru.
It would be by far better for those people that miss the feature to keep it alive - you are no more or less responsible for keeping the website alive than I am. Know something about a posting, comment. Think about a question you can ask every day or once a week than post it. Something you just learned, something you know and share the knowledge. Get event that 10% of people that are members of the website posting a question even once a week and you now have 27 questions per week. That's what the question much less any other part of this website is supposted to be about.
Want a question for today? Something I just noticed while making LeMaitrie 1/4" sound cable
jack to
XLR adaptors for the controller on a G-100 for it's extension cable is how both 1/4" phone jacks get wired and the by the
book color code for 3-pin
XLR plugs.
Unbalanced Phone Jacks have two contact points. How do you
wire the male given single pair (two
conductor plus
shield wire) cable?
A) Tip is (-), body is
shield, and don't use the (+).
B) Tip is (-), body is (+) and
shield.
C) Tip is (+), body is
shield and don't use the (-).
D) Tip is (+), body is (-) and
shield.
Here is another, Given the above cable and black and red, or black and white wires, which is the (+) Positive signal
wire color?
A) Black
B) White/Red
Given an
XLR - 3-pin
plug, which pin is supposted to be (-)?
A) Pin 1 is (-).
B) Pin 2 is (-).
C) Pin 3 is (-).
As I said, I learned all this while thumbing
thru LeMaitrie's
manual on the G-100 and on
Page 202 of the Backstage Handbook III. Knew there was some reason I was wiring my cable with X color as pin three, but forgot why.