AES48 , is there a test to determine?


I just got a Benchmark HPA4 preamp that I know adheres to the AES48 standard. It sits between my Schiit Yiggy dac and PS Audio M700 mono amps. All 3 components have XLR connections, but without contacting the companies, is there some type of easy test to find out if the other two are AES48?
koestner
@jetter ,
I recall Ralph saying that equipment using AES48 will result in cable artifacts being reduced. Whether differing cables will sound ’identical’ is probably more a matter of opinion.
FWIW, I bought a 10 meter set of XLR’s from Ralph years ago and didn’t think of upgrading until recently when I bought a set of AQ Mackensie XLR’s. To be honest, I didn’t perceive a marked difference in sound quality.- So, perhaps Ralph is correct.
YMMV.

Bob
PS- I should add that I am running Ayre and Atmasphere equipment. Both manufacturers utilize the AES standard.
@gdnrbob ,
Thanks for providing your experience using the XLR cables, very interesting and of course first hand knowledge is best. I’m still using all RCAs at this point.

It has always stuck in my brain that Ralph mentioned what we have been discussing.
George

Yyz, thanks for the link. I’m thinking my dac and amp are just the 4volt “balanced” type. So I will have to avoid the Benchmark xlr cables, and choose a more common type.
It was partially your high opinion of the HPA4 that lead me to try purchase one. Since the HPA4 is AES48 even though it has both balanced and single ended outputs without a switch (please comment Ralph)
Without a look under the hood I suspect that this preamp does not support the standard because it has RCA outputs that seem to be in parallel with the balanced outputs. A DVM would answer the question easily enough. Again, the balanced standard ignores ground- its literally not part of the audio circuit. Here is a nice primer about balanced connections:https://www.ranecommercial.com/kb_article.php?article=2107
As you can see, in a balanced connection the ground is chassis ground, not the audio ground. An RCA needs the sleeve connection to the same as the audio ground, not the chassis (which is why you usually see insulating washers with RCA connectors). Since the sleeve is audio ground and not the chassis, this would mean that the XLR ground (pin 1) is at audio ground. This is why AES48 is usually not supported if you see both types of outputs together. But it is possible to get around this by having additional circuitry driving the RCA output that is in parallel with that driving the XLR outputs. Then AES48 can be supported. That is why I say 'without a look under the hood', and why I've been careful to employ caveats.