Phono Cable "breakout"


Need a little help. My phono stage inputs are 9 inches apart. This is a problem since on most cables the pigtails that breakout from the main jacket are not long enough. It appears that Hovland Music Groove would work. Anything else? My table is a VPI and so rca/rca cables is what I need. Thanks for input.
240zracer
You need to try some different ones first. For phono, they do need to be shielded better in a lot of cases. RF from radio stations, AC hum, could leak into some. I don't use the braided/interweave type for phono. That design seems to have some hum IME. I go by what sounds good there.
Synergistic Research Tricon phono cables come as 2 separate RCA cables so that should also work for you. I am using SR Tricon with my VPI table also.
Tricon sounds interesting even though I cannot find one picture of the phono version, and no mention of it on the Synergistic website. Once again, I wonder if Tricon and Tricon phono are the same cable.
Any RCA interconnect can be used for phono, but since the cable is handling a much lower level signal than with line level sources some additional criteria should be considered. Suitable interconnects should generally be well shielded designs, since these cables are susceptible to picking up hum from any electromagnetic sources in close proximity. The cables should also have low capacitance which is particularly important for MM cartridges, since their sound is more significantly affected by capacitive loading than are MC cartridges. The bottom line is that you can really try any RCA cables with your setup and just see which sound best to you.
Since audio began, we didn't have cables labeled for phono until recent years that I knew of, or at least payed any attention to them. I've tried some that friends loaned to me since they're always trying something new. My regular cables seems to sound better than some of the ones that are labeled as phono, in the same price range,or pricier sometimes, from the same companies. Like I mentioned above, try them first and go by the sound. The only ones that don't seem to work is the braided type do to poor shielding I'm guessing, plus some of them don't specs to compare . I use low output MC and MM cartridges. I wouldn't be surprised if some record companies just use coax, standard IC's to see how a record sounds fresh of the press.