Great site, great-looking company. Thanks, Rajesh, for nudging me in that direction![]()
They completely eschew the whole audiophile cable thing, and assemble non-exotic leads from pro quality measured and tested cable.
Well, they do some exotic things too. Check this out: Ultrasonic Welded Speaker Cable -- Blue Jeans Cable
Definitely exotic.![]()
reubensm said:Here's another one from my archives (favourites list) on xlr connectors...
When do we really want balanced operation ?
Well, the answer is not easy.
If the cable must be long, lets imagine a CD source in one corner of the room, near the listener, and amps close to speakers - then we need circa 10 m of interconnect. We should use balanced interconnect.
If we need to plug the interconnect in HOT mode without blowing the amp and speakers - XLR is the only option. RCA has design error which causes the hot co connect before ground and this causes huge impulse if plugged in play mode.
For normal mode of hi fi use - we have the products stacked in the rack, the cables are short, and we don't plug cables in play mode. So the need of balanced is questionable.
Some of the best products in existence, like Audio Note, Kondo, Air Tight, Verdier, Jadis, etc. - are mostly single ended.
Knowing the balanced construction - we can assume that for equally well made products - the Balanced must cost double. The mode of operation makes sense, it promises good quality, but is it better than SE if SE could cost twice as much per phase ?
That is the key. A 2000 Eu Balanced amp has the construction for 500 Eu per phase. Does the balancing improve it as much to beat the 2000 Eu single ended amp which phase costs 1000 Eu ?
If you ask me - SE is the way to go. I mean - good SE.
A word of warning - having XLR sockets does NOT AUTOMATICALLY MEAN that the product is balanced. Many SE amps have balanced inputs which immediately get summed inside for SE and amplified as SE and then split again by opamp to XLR. So check before you buy.
Nice article....thanks for sharing this.
I'm Glad that you guys found it useful. @reubensm, thank you for the article; it is quite exhaustive so, bookmarking it for later read.Thanks captrajesh, very useful article.
Here's another one from my archives (favourites list) on xlr connectors, maybe useful particularly for those using the Behringer DEQ2496 in hi-fi setups.
NU9N Transmitter eSSB, SSB, Hi-fi, Mid-fi, Lo-fi Audio Processing
Some transports and DACs have the SP/dif signal available in balanced form - the AES/EBU XLR. Is it good?
Well, ther sp/dif signal is generated in respective chip as single ended. To make it AES/EBU we need to add unnecessary ballancing transformer and to make "artificial balancing". This is sound degradation. But, at least, this signal can be sent on long distance, much longer than th maximum 1,2 m allowed by SP/DIF.
So if we work in the studio - AES/EBU is not optional.
The receiver part of the DAC has receiver chip with AES/EBY as a ready option (Rxn, Rxp inputs). So the AES/EBU does not require second unbalancing transformer, it is indifferent to standard.
Concerning the cable - EX/EBU is a much better option, with better RFI immunity, better common mode rejection, less influence of cable quality, better plugs, better shielding, everything.
All things being equal, If I had my way I would use AES/EBU rather than sp/dif but making damn sure, that my balancing transformer in the transport is top notch , good to 30 MHz. That's a worthwhile upgrade.
arj, That's an excellent quote, and no, we don't need balanced interconnects for things that are are connected by mere inches of cable. I think that Kanwar might have mentioned triple as the cost factor when implementing balanced i/o on an amp. There's no advantage in using balanced cable unless it is carrying balanced signals. It could become one of those hifi fads, except that it not expensive enough.
It just so happens that I use balanced cables for my PC audio. Just because the interface has balanced out, the speakers have balanced in, and, well... there it is. Might be tempted to use it in the event of ever having a system with genuine balanced in/out throughout --- but that is theoretical, and would never be a requirement.
hydra, clever plugs. Never thought about that.