Is there a difference in balanced cables??


From one brand to another, is there a difference? I am new here and I have noticed there is not as much discussion concerning balanced cables as compared to speaker or I/C cables. My gear is connected with balanced cables from Blue Jean Cables. Good enough?
baffled
THANK YOU.

A friend also wrote that I may have misunderstood what the dealer was saying, though I do know that components with XLR connections may not be fully blananced.

Can you tell me what a multi-meter is and where to get one? This would be a useful check to run.
Jafox wrote:

blilikoi: What I suspect the dealer meant was that many electronic components with XLR connections are not truly balanced. However, it is very easy to determine if ICs with XLR connectors are balanced: verify with a multi-meter that all three pins are one to one from one end to the other and none are shorted to each other.

What the dealer most likely meant is that not all XLR cables have a three-wire configuration. There are some cables on the market (such as the Audience Maestro) that are designed to be used in single-ended configurations. They are made of a single pair of wire - one for hot, one for ground.

In order to be used with XLR connectors, they use one wire for hot, one for negative, and use the wire shield to connect the ground pins.

These cables would, of course, pass a continuity test with a meter; however, using the shield to connect the ground pins is sub-optimal.
Rex, the cable you describe may be sub-optimal, but it allows the complimentary phases to be passed nevertheless, and therefore we have a truly balanced signal. Such a design simply ties the chassis ground to the signal ground....but this ultimately happens in the system anyway.
what is your system? balanced or not, can have different conclusions for different electronics (even if they offer both in terms of connectivity)...for example Ayre really does want balanced