Dear almarg:
Your posts and advice deserves historically (at least from my perspective) a complete and proper answer.
If I am interpreting correctly (and I’m not sure that I am), I believe
Luis is saying that completely disconnecting the "looped," shielded, and
balanced preamp-to-amp cable from the preamp (not just disconnecting
the shield) resulted in hum and buzz.
Correct
While doing the same thing with an unshielded cable resulted in buzz but no hum.
Not exactly, the unshielded cable poses no hum and no buzz (on the true balanced connection) as tested
And replacing the "looped," shielded, and balanced DAC-to-preamp cable
with an unshielded one essentially resolved the remaining buzz.
Correct
Also, I believe that when Luis refers to a shield being "looped" he
simply means that it is not connected at the corresponding end.
Also correct, looped means the cable shield is not connected to ground at one end as usually should be, but connected to itself at the ends by means of an external wire or outer added shield over the cable jacket which is isolated from everything else. JSSG for wire loop or JSSG360 for external braid loop.
If those interpretations are correct I would not attribute the differing results to differences in capacitance
Well I'm not an EE but somehow I thought the cable jacket will resemble and act as a dielectric and the shield will get "charge" as a capacitor hence increasing the Mogami speced capacitance for such cable, but I could be wrong on my assumptions.
I can certainly envision that a cable of any type hanging off of the
input of a component, while not being connected to a signal source,
could result in hum as a result of EMI effects
My actual testing with an unshielded cable showed no hum or other effect. Of course to have rigorous testing I should have tested a shielded cable not looped over itself but shield connected to ground at the ends "mea culpa"
As I and others have said in past threads it is often ***very*** easy in
audio to attribute an observed difference to the wrong variable. And
that is especially likely to be the case when the observations involve a
very limited number of components, cables, and circumstances. I believe
that in this case differences in cable capacitance were not the cause
of the observed differences.
You are correct I did not "used" all the available variables, now the shield loop in the cable it is my understanding it will affect capacitive coupling per the article below
https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=&ved=2ahUKEwio...Note that I am not a John Swenson detractor, it is completely feasible that the looped shield on certain specific applications (DC cables, signal cables, digital cables etc) and with certain signals/currents (DC, AC, digital streams etc) could provide some "enhancement" (I would even dare to say tone control) on certain cables and possibly be of detriment on others.
I think we have deviated enough from this thread :)
My conclusion for balanced connections on my equipment (per manufacturer's recommendations) standard Mogami console cable with no tricks will do the trick :)
And this is one of the reasons I wanted to go "seriously" into analog as well, digital is "so convenient" but "so hard" to get it right and there is just no real reference on what to look for that I decided to listen to both (without spending a fortune)
OMG I hijacked this thread, my apologies to the OP, I will shut up now