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I needed a 3.5mm jack to XLR microphone cable. I ordered this not knowing if it would work with my ec everse 8 speaker, but it works perfectly. I'm very pleased with this product.
I got it in the mail today. I connected my condenser mic [Sennheiser 935] to my LG V50 without having to take the case off. I made sure that cable was set to cell phone, and within my phone I used 'Manual Video' mode, which allows me to pick the appropriate mic input and adjust the gain. I took all of 3 minutes to set this up, and I made a quick recording [included]. As the subject says, works PERFECTLY for me.
Man this cable was perfect for the radio show I produce called The Donnie McClurkin show. Sometimes the host Donnie McClurkin cannot record straight into his laptop and this is a great back up and records very well when you add a cardio mic.
I was wanting to connect an XLR calibration condenser microphone through a phantom power unit to go into my iPhone to override the built-in iPhone microphone. This is in regard to an audio spectrum analysis app I like to use for sound engineering measurement purposes. Of course with any connection to an iPhone you need an Apple certified lightning headphone adapter. So to get from the female lightning headphone jack I assumed I needed a cable with a male 1/8” TRS jack to a female XLR plug. Long story short (after a few unsuccessful connection purchases, and some complicated misleading info the Internet), I found it wasn’t as simple as just buying a cable with a male TRS 1/8” on one end and female XLR on the other. That didn’t work. But THIS unit with the TRRS 1/8” male was the only way I could make a successful connection. And it’s not expensive and it works with Apple. So it appears Apple certified lightning connection has a 1/8” female jack that accommodates TRRS for external cameras and microphones.