that being said your Amplifier and preamp need to have transformers for the input,outputs to be what is considered a True balanced .
This statement is false. You don’t need transformers, but without them supporting the balanced standard gets a lot trickier. We developed a means that is direct-coupled and yet floats the same way that a transformer winding does.
Many owners of Atmasphere gear (amps to preamps....all balanced) have reported the same cable differences that others have reported on other balanced gear.
Oddly, they’ve not been reporting them to me.
A balanced signal is simply two unbalanced signals, one 180 degrees out of phase (mirror image).
This statement is incorrect. With a proper balanced signal, the non-inverted phase is created with respect to the inverted phase, **not ground** (which is for shielding only). So its not two unbalanced signals- its only one, which floats with respect to ground (IOW, if you wanted, you could run a balanced signal with only two wires by simply omitting the shield)! This fact is poorly understood, but think of a line transformer- it does not use a center tap- one side of the output winding is tied to pin 2 of the XLR, the other side to pin 3. No ground connection at all. **Balanced lines if properly executed ignore ground**.
So it isn’t two single-ended signals- although a lot of manufacturers think it is, and in so doing degrade the performance of the balanced connection (and allow for interconnect cable artifacts and ground loops to creep into the system sound equation). When we built the world’s first balanced line preamps back in 1989, it didn’t occur to us that we could do that without supporting the standard. I was a bit shocked when I started to see other balanced gear that in no way supported the standard, and then exotic interconnects appeared because they were needed to work with such substandard equipment. You’d think that audiophiles would jump at the chance to no longer have to spend big $$$$ on cables and yet still get the best results...
In a nutshell, here is the standard:
1) pin 1 ground, pins 2 and 3 are signal. Pin 2 in the US is non-inverted side of the signal
2) ground is ignored, the signal floats; the pin2 signal is created with respect to pin 3 and vice versa
3) the system is low impedance- if there is an output XLR, its able to drive 1000 to 2000 ohms with ease (the old standard was 600 ohms and our preamps support that)
4) the signal travels in an interconnect consisting of a twisted pair with an independent shield.
I clearly said that the pin lengths on the male connectors of my XLR cables appear to be the same for all of the pins. It is the female connector for which I described a difference, which when mated with a male connector having equal length pins would result in the ground connection being made first, upon insertion, and removed last, upon removal.
Al, for all these decades of doing balanced connections, I’d never noticed that. You have to look quite closely at the female connector!! @millercarbon, my apologies on this point.