Addendum to my previous post:
I should emphasize that in Figure 2.1 of the reference I linked to, it should be noted that the adapter arrangement is NOT simply an xlr-to-rca adapter at the destination component's input, fed via an rca-to-rca cable. To achieve the common mode noise rejection he describes, shielded twisted pair cable needs to be used, with the lo/cold/inverted signal line grounded only at the source end.
That configuration prevents signal return currents from flowing through the cable shield in common with inter-chassis noise and hum currents, which is what would happen with an rca-to-rca cable. The twisted pair construction also helps to assure that noise pickup is common mode (i.e., that it is as similar as possible on the "hi" and "lo" signal leads, so that the differential receiver stage can reject it).
Regards,
-- Al
I should emphasize that in Figure 2.1 of the reference I linked to, it should be noted that the adapter arrangement is NOT simply an xlr-to-rca adapter at the destination component's input, fed via an rca-to-rca cable. To achieve the common mode noise rejection he describes, shielded twisted pair cable needs to be used, with the lo/cold/inverted signal line grounded only at the source end.
That configuration prevents signal return currents from flowing through the cable shield in common with inter-chassis noise and hum currents, which is what would happen with an rca-to-rca cable. The twisted pair construction also helps to assure that noise pickup is common mode (i.e., that it is as similar as possible on the "hi" and "lo" signal leads, so that the differential receiver stage can reject it).
Regards,
-- Al