What is the difference between balanced and unbalanced
audio cables?
Because
they cancel out interference, BALANCED CABLES are generally
effective in preserving the integrity of the audio signal.
Connector plugs commonly used on balanced cables are
XLR (3-prong mic connector) or TRS (Tip, Ring, Sleeve)
1/4" phone plugs. Balanced cables have one ground connection
and two signal-carrying conductors ("leads") of equal
potential but opposite polarity. This means that there
is a "hot" or positive lead, and a "cold" or negative
lead. Thus the audio signal is transmitted both in and
out of phase (+ and -) at the same time. Both leads
pick up hum interference, but this hum cancels out at
the balanced input connection because it's equivalent
in its presence both in and out of phase.
Balanced
cables can be either TWISTED-PAIR or NON-TWISTED PAIR;
twisted-pair are more effective for hum reduction because
both leads receive equivalent hum.
UNBALANCED
CABLES have one conductor and a shield, and connect
to unbalanced 1/4" phone plugs or RCA phono plugs. Because
the signal is transmitted through both the lead and
the shield, hum is received by both, at different levels.
This difference in hum is amplified at the unbalanced
input connection. Interference is therefore a problem
in unbalanced cables, but the shorter the cable, the
less hum introduced into the system.
How
do I connect balanced and unbalanced equipments?
Audio
signals can flow between balanced and unbalanced gear.
A BALANCED CABLE can be wired to an UNBALANCED CONNECTOR:
To wire a 3-pin balanced mic cable to an unbalanced
phone plug: the "hot" lead (red or white color-coded
insulation) should be soldered to the phone-plug tip,
the "cold" lead (black color-coded insulation) and the
shield/ground should be soldered to the phone plug ground
lug. Though this type of cabling is common, there is
a better way to connect balanced and unbalanced gear.
By using the physics of inductance and impedance matching
you can turn a unbalanced -10dBV signal into a balanced
+4dBU signal.
Is
expensive shielded cable really better than standard
cable?
Better
shielding translates to better hum-rejection, and less
interference.
How
can we avoid interference?
Avoid
running audio and power cables together. If possible,
isolate power sources from audio connections. Use balanced
cables whenever possible.
Do
I lose signal integrity with length of cable?
Unbalanced
cables gain hum with length. The impedance of the equipment
also contributes to signal integrity. Hum-pickup and
high-frequency loss can result from using long cables
with high-impedance equipment.
What's
the advantage in using a snake?
A
SNAKE or MULTICORE AUDIO CABLE is a group of shielded
cables encased together for efficiency and uniformity.
There is one large cable to run, versus several individual
cables of varying lengths and qualities.
What
is a ground loop?
Annoying
hum in your signal chain is characteristic of a ground
loop. A ground loop results when a piece of gear has
more than one ground connection. This can happen when
you run audio cables between two pieces of equipment,
because both pieces of gear are grounded through their
AC cables, so the shield in the connecting audio cable
serves to complete a ground circuit loop.
How
can I avoid ground loops?
Using
a transformer between grounded pieces of gear breaks
the loop. A direct box can have this effect, or you
can use a 1:1 isolation transformer.. Another option
is to use only one circuit breaker in your power connection
(so make sure your outlets/power sources are wired to
one breaker).
* Source : AudioMIDI.com,
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