Signal degradation when connecting XLR cables?

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Frankm666

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Is there signal degradation (of importance) when connecting XLR cables.
Am I losing S/N or frequency by adding a ten foot XLR to a twenty foot XLR to make the run I need or should all my microphone runs be single cables.

Thanks for the help,

Frank Military
 
You'll be fine. :) All things considered, one more connection ain't gonna hurt nothin'. Especially a nice, tight XLR to XLR connection.
 
And do the lengths of XLR cables effect sound? Or for that matter, is it ok to lay an XLR cable over on itself, or wind it up like a garden hose? XLR cables are pretty much all balanced aren't they? so there shouldn't be a worry?
 
Monkey Allen said:
And do the lengths of XLR cables effect sound? Or for that matter, is it ok to lay an XLR cable over on itself, or wind it up like a garden hose? XLR cables are pretty much all balanced aren't they? so there shouldn't be a worry?

As long as it is even barely acceptable cable, you wouldn't notice any change for a hundred feet or so, probably a good bit more. With even OK cable you can go a lot farther than that.

It's OK to pile them right up. There isn't enough current or voltage running through a mic cable to cause any problems from them laying on each other. In multi-channel snakes all the mic lines are about as close as you can get them, after all, and usually right next to a bunch of line-level cables as well. :)
 
I have often wondered about that - I keep getting told that it's so important to not coil the cables and stuff whilst they're being used, but clearly they're much closer when they're all packed into a multi-core with only relatively fine insulators between them.
 
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