Balanced interconnects vs. Analog


My Oppo BDP 105 and Wyred4Sound SSi 500 have the balanced inputs/outputs. I use the traditional analog connections but wonder what others experiences are with the balanced connections. Before I dropped the $$ on the cables I thought I might seek out opinions.
Thanks!

beernut

Showing 2 responses by adg101

The geometry of a cable has more to do with canceling RF and EMI over single or balanced cable such as a braid or twisting the conductors around each other. Insulators and shields have much to do with this, and a well engineered cable with no shield can be very quiet. Many cable manufactures design or geometry of their actual cable is the same cable whether they are selling it as a balance or single ended RCA IC; they only change out the ends. Yes, the way they terminate the ends is different obviously and it varies on the geometry of the cable. I've used single ended Kimber's KCAG which has no shield laying across power cords and picked up no noise; that cable with balanced ends is the same bulk cable.

Balanced cables are primarily used in studio or on stage because first that's the preferred end by the manufactures of the equipment and mic's, it's a better end as it locks into place so no worries the cable will pull out if someone snags a cable and a balanced cable can drive the signal at no or little loss of the signal over a single ended design when we're talking about a cable running over 20 feet or more. A lot of gear is not a true balanced design and some gear even with XLR jacks are not a balanced circuit. Most pro audio gear is a balance circuit because it is expected cables are going to be very long. The point I'm making is if the equipment is not a balanced circuit, it doesn't matter if the ends on the cable are RCA's or XLR,s.

I personally have used many of the pro cable lines on stage and have dragged them home and tried them on my home system so I do have personal experience. I buy my studio cables in bulk and terminate them myself and I've tried various XLR manufactures as well. I've compared them to my home cables and they're not in the same league and they shouldn't be for the cost difference. Using my pro cables on my home system I prefer my RCA - single ended cables and my gear sounds best with balanced cables because my equipment is of balanced circuit. My single ended cables are all Clear Day Cables and they are very good cables for the money. Switching over to my balanced cables which are also Clear Day and WyWires it is night and day difference between the much lowered priced pro cables. The pro cables don't sound bad at all; actually they are very musical and forgiving on poor recordings. They're not as revealing as higher priced cables, which I feel they are more of a tone control over better cables. Some may actually prefer their softer or warmer balance on some equipment and likely wasting their money spending more because their system isn't as revealing or maybe a little forward or bright to begin with. I also find pro cables don't have the openness, air or stage of more expensive cables and this personally where I find its time to pull them out of my system. I can live with a softer cable because much of the music I enjoy isn't recorded very well, but when the stage is smaller or flat that's where I'll stick with my better cables. I'm a big fan of Clear Day Cables and they do many things very well and a great value. The pro cables don't begin to touch the Clear Days, and they Clear Days are much more open, but that being said that's where my newer WyWires really pull away. I have both balanced Clear Day and WyWires. The WyWires are extremely open and the Clear Day by comparison sound closed in which they're not.

Everyone's going to have their own opinion on the sound of cables and that's the way it should be. It really only matters what ones ear likes and how much money ones willing to lay out I suppose. Good to read others opinions and learn from others as well I say. Cheers.
Belden, Mogami and Canare are ok, but they don't come close to a decent or better set of cables. Anyone who's really compared them, knows better or their equipment isn't there to begin with. A lot of affordable balanced cables that are far better than the pro audio stuff. I use Canare on stage for a few reasons; it's very flexible, reliable, sounds decent and is forgiving - meaning not ultra revealing, and most importantly when you need many feet it is cheap. If you're on a real tight budget all the above are very good for the money, but if can spend anymore you will be happier. Can't speak for your gear, but some gear has XLR jacks for convenience only and are not a balanced circuit, so in that case you really won't get much or any improvement. Before you invest money in a balanced cable verify if your gear is truly balanced; if they are then I would make the change.