DJ Basic - Cables

Friday, 24 July 2009

Unbalanced Lines

Unbalanced signal lines are characterized by the fact that the cable and connectors use only two conductors, a center conductor surrounded by a shield. Examples of unbalanced wiring are found in tip/sleeve ¼" cords or the cables used with many CD players and tape decks which terminate with RCA phono type connectors.

In an unbalanced configuration, the shield surrounds a single center conductor. The shield stays at a constant ground potential (as it is connected to ground when plugged into equipment) while the signal voltage in the center conductor varies in a positive and negative manner relative to it. Because the shield completely surrounds the center or "hot" conductor and is connected to ground, it intercepts most of the electrical interference encountered by the cable and passes it away harmlessly to ground. Because the shield is one of the two conductors required to complete the circuit, it must always be connected at both ends of the cable. This may set up a condition called a "ground loop" that sometimes produces hum when the grounds of different pieces of electrical equipment are connected to each other.

If outside electrical interference does manage to penetrate the shield, it will mix with the desired signal that is present in the center conductor and be amplified right along with it as noise, buzz, etc. This might not be a huge problem with cd players, tape decks and unbalanced microphones when the cable is only a few feet long. But in environments containing a lot of interference or when an unbalanced signal is sent long distances, such as down a snake, it will become more and more susceptible to unwanted interference. This problem can be alleviated with the use of balanced lines.

Balanced Lines

Balanced lines are characterized by the fact that there are two center conductors for the signal, usually surrounded by a shield. This shield is connected to ground like unbalanced lines but it is not required as one of the signal conductors. The sole purpose of the shield is to provide extra defense against unwanted interference. A benefit of this configuration is that the shield only needs to be connected to ground at one end of the cable in order for it to work. Having this ground disconnected or "lifted" at one end can eliminate the ground loop problem discussed in the previous section on unbalanced lines. The two center conductors of a balanced line act as the sole conduit for the signal. If any unwanted electrical interference enters these signal conductors, it will interact with both center conductors equally but with the same polarity. The effect in the receiving circuitry is that these same polarity voltages can be made to effectively cancel each other out and the noise disappears. This ability of balanced lines to reject noise and interference makes them popular when it is necessary to send signals over long distances.

Cable Types

The XLR cable (3 prong) This is a common microphone cable. May also be used as a line level cable for gear that has balanced ins and outs. These cables can go long distances, even to another room if required. their lock-in mechanism make them more secue than 1/4" cables.

Speakon cables are used predominantly in conjunction with PA equipment such as speakers and amplifiers and offers the most secure speaker connection.

The 1/4" TRS "Tip-ring-sleeve" cable (2-conductor plus ground) This is a cable for balanced signals just like the XLR above, it just has different connectors. Note that TRS cables are typically used for mono, not stereo, signals in most studio gear. The exception being the headphone jack.Like the XLR these cables can go long distances, even to another room if required.

The TS "Tip-sleeve" cable (2 conductor "phone jack") This cable is for unbalanced signals. These cables should be kept as short as possible. Keep them under 12 feet and away from power transformers (wall warts) or they may pick up dreaded hum and ruin your audio signal.

The RCA Cable ("home stereo" cable) Because each cable in the RCA pair ) only has 1 conductor plus ground, it is for unbalanced signals, just like the TS cable above. Keep them as short as possible. Mostly used to connect input devices such as cd players,cd decks, effect machines, etc that are located in the DJ booth.

A variation on this is the Soundcard 1/8" stereo plug to dual RCA. Its very helpful with consumer grade soundcards and some laptops. Keep them as short as possible.

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