Why use ground wire from preamp to amp???
The cables are nice looking, shielded, silver solder, cardas connectors silver plated, all silver solder used, silver tinned strands,Yatta Yatta Yatta, ok whatever,
Their reference rca's come with the third ground wire? They said hook it to the preamp ground?
This is not for phono connection, why would anyone hook a ground wire to preamp when not using the turntable? I have never heard of this before, would this be dangerous, if some current or noise is sent down the ground wire directly into the cables at the input of the amp??
Why even have them?? What is the purpose, or have I been out of the game too long?
shouldnt I just order regular reference rca's without that silly third ground wire which serves no purpose unless hooked up to a turntable???
HELP ME UNDERSTAND, PLEASE
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- 18 posts total
What you speak of is the shield of a shielded interconnect cable. My post refers to the signal ground return wire of an interconnect. Now in the case of a coax cable the shield and the signal ground return wire are one in the same and the shield must be connected to the connectors at both ends.
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"Tannoy’s unique fifth speaker terminal electrically grounds the driver chassis, reducing potential sound degradation form radio frequency interference. Eliminating potential RF ‘noise’ enhances midrange clarity and allows Definition to deliver an even more expressive musical presentation." >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> Are you using that? Where did you connect it to? |
- 18 posts total