Forgive me, I tire of this thread. What started as an intelligent debate has devolved into childish wordplay. I must be annoying everyone as I keep repeating myself (a sign of insanity) like a broken record. I'm like a homeless bum pushing a shopping cart mumbling to myself. Seriously, didn't I just say:
"...or some other reference voltage similar to ground..."?
And before that:
"...the receiver is providing the common mode reference..."?
Maybe my posts are moderated and nobody else can see them. If so, I apologize. I had thought the see-saw analogy and the fact that the input stage is providing the common mode reference (pivot point) for the cart would make sense.
Why did I bother? It's very simple. I like the truth. I don't like the way marketing can obscure and twist reality. You see, there are a few phono stages out there with XLR inputs that have pin 3 tied to ground. Hence, they actually run single-ended. Clearly that is not the case for atmasphere or bat. Just a few I won't name. The problem, as I see it, is that perpetuating this myth that a cartridge in and of itself is a balanced transmitter gives these folks a pass. Customers end up believing. Hey, it had an XLR input, right?
The tragic irony here, is that the guy doing the most to benefit the disengenuous is someone who makes the effort to do it right.
jh
"...or some other reference voltage similar to ground..."?
And before that:
"...the receiver is providing the common mode reference..."?
Maybe my posts are moderated and nobody else can see them. If so, I apologize. I had thought the see-saw analogy and the fact that the input stage is providing the common mode reference (pivot point) for the cart would make sense.
Why did I bother? It's very simple. I like the truth. I don't like the way marketing can obscure and twist reality. You see, there are a few phono stages out there with XLR inputs that have pin 3 tied to ground. Hence, they actually run single-ended. Clearly that is not the case for atmasphere or bat. Just a few I won't name. The problem, as I see it, is that perpetuating this myth that a cartridge in and of itself is a balanced transmitter gives these folks a pass. Customers end up believing. Hey, it had an XLR input, right?
The tragic irony here, is that the guy doing the most to benefit the disengenuous is someone who makes the effort to do it right.
jh