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Re: [Amps] World's worst coax connectors

To: amps@contesting.com
Subject: Re: [Amps] World's worst coax connectors
From: Jim Brown <jim@audiosystemsgroup.com>
Reply-to: jim@audiosystemsgroup.com
Date: Thu, 20 Apr 2023 12:13:20 -0700
List-post: <mailto:amps@contesting.com>
On 4/20/2023 11:47 AM, Paul Christensen wrote:
  Most preassembled XLR cables I've seen do not bond Pin 1 to the shell.  1/4" 
and 3.5 mm are poor designs as the signal pins typically rely on a single-point of 
contact.  They also don't guarantee a shield before signal connection.

That's because AES Standards define Pin 1 as the designated shield contact, with no connection to the shell. They call for Pin 1 to be bonded to the shielding enclosure at the point of entry to ACTIVE equipment, but to have NO connection for tie lines. See AES48, AES54-1, AES54-2, and AES54-3, of which I am a principal author. These Standards were developed by WG members from broadcasting in both EU and NA, recording studios, and large and small scale sound reinforcement. They were developed between about 1996 and 2003, and apply to balanced analog audio at both mic and line levels.

There's a very good reason for this -- cable shields bonded to power system grounds at different locations in a building, or to a recording or broadcast truck, can carry very large currents as a result of power distribution. One of the members of the WG who was an engineer at ABC-TV in Manhattan spoke of very large differences in ground potential between buildings across the street from each other; these tie lines were transformer isolated, and ran at line level.

It's been at least three decades since transformers have been standard on the vast majority of production audio mixers. In 1994, Bill Whitlock, then owner and chief engineer at Jensen transformers, published a landmark paper analyzing the balanced interface as a Wheatstone bridge, and tutorial work showing that, with properly wired tie lines, a balanced electronic interface was just fine for most applications.The IEEE Standard for measurement of CMRR was revised to reflect his work.

73, Jim K9YC








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