At your risk.
Schematic of XLR to 3.5mm to USB C adaptor.
External view of XLR to 3.5mm to USB C adaptor.
Internal view of XLR to 3.5 electret mic in adaptor.
The idea behind this is treating the SM58 as it were a condencer electret microphone.
The SM58 has an internal transformer to step up the moving coil capsule to typicaly 300 Ohms.
The K117 gate is connected to the seconary of this transformer ie to the output of the Shure SM58.
The load drain resistor is on the device to connect to the Pleiades K117 pre preamplifier, and this device supplies the voltage to operate the K117 JFet.
This device can be an older iPhone or iPad or any device with 3.5mm electret mic input.
This of cource includes a modern 3.5mm to USB C adaptor to connect to almost any modern device!
Nice female vocals were recorded at 18in to 24in on a modern mobile phone.
Obviously the further away the microphone from singer the best it sounded as greater distance gives less proximity effect so the listener can now hear more treble detail, breath etc.
To increase further the sensitivity a good quality step up transformer can be connected between any dynamic or ribbon microphone and the Pleiades K117 XLR to USB C adaptor. A small 1:3, or 1:5 ratio may be better to avoid possible overload but it is best to experiment.
It may be worth including enerything on one box, ie input transformer, Pleiades K117 to 3.5mm and Apple 3.5mm to USB C adaptor.
Please also see much older posts on how this has evolved.
Many thanks to ny friends Lefteris and Panos for making clear the inportance of 1 stage electron tube or JFet respectively, microphone amplifiers.


