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Audio and Video Talk
General Discussion
Xlr to RCA adapters
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<blockquote data-quote="pwatts" data-source="post: 818440" data-attributes="member: 146"><p>Bridging on the input side. Everything doubles, so the input signal has two identical signals of exact inverted magnitude, as opposed to just one and ground. Advantages are, in layman's terms, to reduce noise over long lengths and (potential) capability of improved performance due to the doubled signal amplitude. Generally speaking, if your gear has XLR interfaces it's better to use them but that depends on the design and sometimes RCA still sounds better. For long cable lengths or harsh signal environments, XLR is king though.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="pwatts, post: 818440, member: 146"] Bridging on the input side. Everything doubles, so the input signal has two identical signals of exact inverted magnitude, as opposed to just one and ground. Advantages are, in layman's terms, to reduce noise over long lengths and (potential) capability of improved performance due to the doubled signal amplitude. Generally speaking, if your gear has XLR interfaces it's better to use them but that depends on the design and sometimes RCA still sounds better. For long cable lengths or harsh signal environments, XLR is king though. [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
General Discussion
Xlr to RCA adapters
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