When I deliver seminars, I usually travel with a sound system instead of relying on renting one from the conference facility. I carried a mixer console, power amp and speaker in one wheeled piece of luggage. There was a rack- mounted wireless mic system in another rolling bag. I daintily carried the microphone, the same model as Britney Spears uses, in my pocket because it was expensive and didn't want it banged up by all the heavy sound gear I was dragging along. Navigating unfamiliar airports solo with a two rolling pieces of luggage and a heavy brief case around my neck is difficult. So I decided to make my own PA system. First of all I really didn't need a wireless mic. Handsfree is the right paradigm. HandsFreePreamp.asc is the schematic of a microphone that works well with the electret mics that are intended for handsfree cell phone operation. Basing the system on such a mic also meant that I could replace the most important part of the system from a roadside convenience store if required. The points to the design are (i) a higher-valued resistor is used for reading out the mic current(10K instead of 2K as is more common). This gives this preamp an edge in S/N because the signal grows like the resistance but the noise goes like the square root of the resistance. (ii) The FET input gives low noise at this high impedance and (iii) even though it's class A, feedback is used to reduce distortion and reduce the output impedance. The larger than normal-valued output capacitor that you see is used to short the cable to this low impedance. PowerAmp.asc is the schematic of the power amp I use. The idea behind the design is to have a bullet-proof circuit that runs off of the same voltage as my notebook power brick. That gave me international power capability and a spare notebook supply, which is also replaceable at most field conference sites. I used discreet components over IC's because they were more available, better documented, and more forgiving of the input voltage range of my notebook powerbrick, than the automotive power amp IC's that first caught my attention. The circuits where build on plated-through hole perfboard. The layout is shown in HandsFreeLayout.asc and PowerAmpLayout.asc. For speakers, I was planning on being able to use a 5 1/2" woofer from my un-used home theater center speaker. But that "woofer" made voice sound like a public address from the movie M.A.S.H. So, instead I used a pair of 4 Ohm car audio speakers in series. This worked out well because (i) they are thin(to mount in car door panels) and (ii) have polypropylene cones to handle adverse environments, like the frozen luggage compartments of commercial aviation. The box was vented with a 1/4-20 nut that serves as a tripod mount and equalized the sealed speaker cabinet for the air pressure changes of flight. Now I have a PA system that fits in a suit case. I guess my next project should be a compact teleprompter. --Mike