A cable which has a floating braid will add capacitance and basically "choke" the current. You need to ground the braid on at least one end.
DIY Digital cable question
Need to make a short digital cable using Supra Trico coax cable. There is a double braid on this cable. The inner braid is the signal return. The outer copper braid is for additional shielding. When I asked the Supra rep how to connect the outer shield, he said to just let it float. Everything I have read said it needs to be connected to ground on one end or the other. (Wish Almarg was still with us)
Thanks for the input.
RE:
That is correct provided that the transport has a grounded three pin plug If the transport has an isolated power supply then the grounded end of the cables should be plugged into the amp/Pre
Regards |
@williewonka - he's talking about a single-ended S/PDIF coax cable, so it will not have a 3-pin XLR plug. However, this is not the same as a XLR analog interconnect. |
@auxinput - RE:
The original posts stated...
In which case the outer braid can be used as a "floating screem/shield" - i.e. it should be connected at only one end IF both components are "grounded" then that end of the cable should be connected to the source. IF only one component is grounded then that end should be connected to the "grounded" component IF neither components are grounded then connect that cable in either direction BTW,
@corelli - you can leave it "floating" at both ends and it will provide "some" benefit, but grounding at one end is better Regards - Steve |