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Post by Chris on Sept 26, 2020 10:51:18 GMT -5
This came through my mailbox today. Pretty interesting. link
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Post by sailor on Sept 26, 2020 10:58:21 GMT -5
could be a game-changer if the industry adopts it it really makes a lot of sense
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Post by speakertom on Sept 26, 2020 16:58:26 GMT -5
Why would you want to do this? The XLR connector is vastly superior to the RCA connector. For a smaller connector, the TRS connector is also superior. Both are industry standards. Also, just having a "balanced" connector does no good if the circuits are not balanced. For the benefit of common mode rejection offered by balanced connections, the impedance of both lines has to be matched virtually perfectly. If you have an impedance imbalance of only 1%, the common mode rejection will drop by 60dB.
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Post by Chris on Sept 27, 2020 16:00:25 GMT -5
Why would you want to do this? The XLR connector is vastly superior to the RCA connector. For a smaller connector, the TRS connector is also superior. Both are industry standards. Also, just having a "balanced" connector does no good if the circuits are not balanced. For the benefit of common mode rejection offered by balanced connections, the impedance of both lines has to be matched virtually perfectly. If you have an impedance imbalance of only 1%, the common mode rejection will drop by 60dB. Well one reason might be form factor as many devices are too small to accommodate standard XLR connectors.
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