NSW, and no Lions vs Magpies (don't even know what they are). Has been two different power amps. Thank you!
How far are you from Yass?
NSW, and no Lions vs Magpies (don't even know what they are). Has been two different power amps. Thank you!
some companies have a switch (connect or disconnect chassis ground to signal ground) but most companies connect the chassis ground to signal ground.Yes, but not all components have AC ground connected to their chassis, for example. So just connecting to a screw on the chassis does not do much, unless that screw is connected to AC ground. It is easy to check with a voltmeter. Shunyata talks about this with their ALTAIRA ground system.
Metaxas for one.some companies have a switch (connect or disconnect chassis ground to signal ground) but most companies connect the chassis ground to signal ground.
please let me know which company does not connect chassis ground to signal ground?
most high end companies connect chassis ground to signal ground.Metaxas for one.
Quite a few do not.
Trinnov may not, not sure.
JVC laser projector NZ9
Another issue is XLR cable wiring is far from being consistent. There are no standards, none that are followed anyway. How your XLR is wired, and how the components want it to be wired, can be a source of noise and component damage.
Pin 1 - connected to (a) Pin 1, (b) cable shield, (c) XLR connector chassis.
You can have none of the above, all of the above, or a combination of the above. If the cable does not match what both upstream and downstream components expect, you are likely adding noise.
Pin 1 should be connected to all of the above on female connector and only to pin 1 on the male connector.Pin 1 - connected to (a) Pin 1, (b) cable shield, (c) XLR connector chassis.
You can have none of the above, all of the above, or a combination of the above. If the cable does not match what both upstream and downstream components expect, you are likely adding noise.
I read the guide. The first few pages are the only pages that capture my attention as that is a field I am interested in. Those pages seem to be a copy of Grounding and Shielding Techniques in Instrumentation, Ralph Morrison,. I have the book and have talked about his techniques in the past.Benchmark's "Clean Audio Installation Guide
This 24 page guide has been very popular. It has been hailed as “required reading for all broadcast engineers” by Richard Sequerra.
“We were able to change our engineering standards throughout the CBC as a result of this paper.” - Tom Holden Manager, Systems Engineering - Radio, CBC Toronto.
This paper revolutionized broadcast audio in the 1980's. It moved the industry away from 600-Ohm interfaces and radically changed the way analog audio was handled in professional environments.
In many ways, this paper still impacts every product that Benchmark builds today. We think that you will find this classic paper as useful today as it was when it was originally published in the 1980's. Due to the popularity of this paper, Allen updated it several times. The links will take you to Allen's final 1997 version.
We agree with Richard Sequerra. This is your required reading assignment!
Are you referring to a Zobel network? And on speakers and/or ICs?Also per that article. You want a audio dealer that is going to cable correctly. As in, use Mogami and apply the resistors and capacitors to the interconnects to truly install studio grade wiring. Finding a guy that can do that. Good luck. That is a very skilled electrician. And I being a licensed electrician can tell you, you are not allowed to do work in states other than where you register your journeyman card. A guy from Calif can't do work in NY, Chicago, WA etc. He can work in Calif. Maybe Nevada if he tests in. But never the east coast.
Back to my point. You need a dealer that will install the infrastructure as well as Mogami cable done right first. Then when he comes trying to sell you expensive ass cables, you know you have the foundation correct and can assess accuratly if the cost of esoteric audiophile cables brings any improvement.
...Japanese gear typically has a "floating" ground, not tied to safety ground. Not all, but not uncommon, for example.most high end companies connect chassis ground to signal ground.
If you read the article and look at Ralph Morrisons Grounding and noise reduction, they use caps and resistors on the ungrounded end of the shield on interconnects. I don't think there was much of speaker cable. They don't care as much. It does not get into the signal when recording.Are you referring to a Zobel network? And on speakers and/or ICs?
Or are the caps and resistors something to do with power?
The older stuff did not ground. I don't think the new stuff has a floating ground. To sell into the USA, it would have to be double insulated. I have not done a deep dive, but superficial noticing things, they use a ground mostly now. Lets say that is Luxman, Accuphase, Pioneer, JVC....Japanese gear typically has a "floating" ground, not tied to safety ground. Not all, but not uncommon, for example.
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