Why so few balanced phono inputs?


I have been through the posts regarding whether a phono cartridge is a balanced connection or not and per Ralph Karsten etc. I agree it is balanced. It finally hit me why someone like Pass Labs doesn't offer a balanced input on a balanced unit (I wanted one until I saw they only had rca)...There are so few turntables that offer a balanced out connection. I got mine from VPI and it was easily switched and was a huge improvement... but are there other TT brands that offer a balanced connection? I was in a high end shop the other day...first time in a while... and saw none. Even SME didn't show one as an option on their site. Not trying to open the balanced vs. single-ended thing but maybe it is endemmic to the conversation. Thanks
sm2727

Showing 3 responses by mattmiller

Yes this is a BAL vs UNBAL conversation. Real quick ill just say BAL is for long cable runs, that's why you always see them used in professional stage gear. The balanced circuit is a more complex one and for home audio, depending on the engineer/designer they my choose to keep the circuit more basic for whatever reasons...In my listening over 35 years I do not think balanced "sounds better" than unbalanced. Many quality components have one or the other or both? Turntables are simple therefore you see mostly unbalanced outputs. Why take something that works great and make it complex by adding balanced circuitry? IMHO.
Well length does matter a lot in professional audio and that's why they use XLR, much lower noise floor and 110ohm vs 75ohm. If your trying to FIX a problem with detail and/or sound quality by switching from RCA to XLR, it dose not always make things better. If your company uses balanced circuts for its audio products that's great. That is a designers choice...But to say that all balanced designs are going to sound better than unbalanced ones is horse shit! Talk to EveAnna Manley at Manley labs who among many others who don't see using unbalanced as a step back in sound quality over balanced. IMO balanced is not the last word in sound quality.
"Conversely, those who make only SE devices (like Manley Labs) are prone to diss the notion of balanced"

This is not true. Manley Labs makes many products that have balanced circuitry. Take a look at there much sought after commercial products and home audio amplifiers like the NEO Classic.