T
tonypham
New member
Has anyone noticed a difference in mic recording when using XLR to XLR cord vs an XLR to 1/4" cord?
okay i'm getting conflicting answers.
AFAIK the XLR has a third pin for phantom power. If you don't need phantom power then I would think the XLR or 1/4 " should sound the same. I have a really old shure mic with 1/4" cable and it works/sounds just as good as my SM58.
that's interesting. does anyone know where i can go read about the physics behind the noise cancellation between the two wires?
Other than some preamps and other outboard gear which only give a 1/4" line out option. Go balanced though. XLR if you can, TRS if you have to & TS if that's your only option. It does make a difference.There is no reason to use anything but XLR in a studio, or even in live sound now.
You're right. My explanation was overly simplified to boot, which is kinda what I was going for but whatever...It's actually not necessary for signal to be on both wires, so long as there are two wires with the same impedance to ground any induced noise will be canceled by a receiving differential amplifier or transformer.
Differential signaling
Signals are often transmitted over balanced connections using the differential mode, meaning the wires carry signals of opposite polarity to each other (for instance, in an XLR connector, pin 2 carries the signal with normal polarity, and pin 3 carries an inverted version of the same signal).
Despite popular belief, this is not necessary for noise rejection. As long as the impedances are balanced, noise will couple equally into the two wires (and be rejected by a differential amplifier), regardless of the signal that is present on them.[1][2] A simple method of driving a balanced line is to inject the signal into the "hot" wire through a known source impedance, and connect the "cold" wire to ground through an identical impedance. Due to common misconceptions about differential signalling, this is often referred to as a quasi-balanced or impedance-balanced output, though it is, in fact, fully balanced and will reject common-mode interference.
However, there are some benefits to driving the line with a fully differential output:
-The electromagnetic field around a differential line is ideally zero, which reduces crosstalk into adjacent cables.
-Though the signal level would not be changed due to nominal level standardization, the maximum output from the differential drivers is twice as much, giving 6 dB extra headroom.[1] (if the amplifiers are identical, though, their output noise sums to 3 dB more than a single amplifier, decreasing dynamic range).
-Noise that is correlated between the two amps (from imperfect power supply rejection, for instance), would be canceled out.
-At higher frequencies, the output impedance of the output amplifier can change, resulting in a small imbalance. When driven in differential mode by two identical amplifiers, this impedance change will be the same for both lines, and thus canceled out.[1]
Differential drivers are also more forgiving of incorrectly wired adapters or equipment that unbalances the signal by shorting pin 2.[1]
Jim Lad said:Other than some preamps and other outboard gear which only give a 1/4" line out option. Go balanced though. XLR if you can, TRS if you have to & TS if that's your only option. It does make a difference.
You're right. My explanation was overly simplified to boot, which is kinda what I was going for but whatever...
I found a good explanation on how this works in the Wiki article entitled: "Balanced audio"