At what distance are balanced XLR cables needed?


I've been looking for a new preamp for my 2 channel system, and I'm debating whether I need balanced inputs if I want to eventually connect it to my home theater processor. I plan on moving soon, so I can't say for sure what distance I would have between the two systems. My preamp options quickly dwindle if I require XLR cables.
hoffer71
Kijanki raises a good question of Ralph. And if all of the fussing with materials and geometry don't make a difference with balanced connections so long as the electronics comply with standards...well, what about unbalanced cables?
Kijanki, yes, I think I can. The purity of metal has a lot to do with 'diode effects' in the material. The idea is that strands of wire do not conduct completely linearly- they are affected by diode junctions that exist between them.

However these diode junctions are not very profound or robust. They would only be detectable (if you will pardon the pun) if you had very low currents in the cable.

Well my friends, this will be the case with most single-ended connections, and for that matter any connection of high impedance.

OTOH, if we are using a balanced system *that conforms to the balanced standard* then there *will* be significant currents, and any primitive diode junctions will be of no account.

Now I should point something out. If anyone tells you that they have more than 99.99% purity of metals in the wire, they are likely pulling your leg. Oxidation makes it virtually impossible to exceed this figure!

Additionally, OFC (99.99% pure copper) was *not* developed for audiophiles, it was developed for alternators and generators because it is more flexible. However, a few weeks after extrusion into the insulation, there will have been enough oxygen contamination of OFC so that, other than flexibility, it will have about the same characteristics and purity as regular ETP copper.
I would suspect that bigger current would cause bigger voltage drops on said junctions (or impurities) everything else being equal.

600ohm must be not very common since I've never seen anything that can drive 600ohm without distortion. For now I will stay with my Acoustic Zen Absolute XLR (7N silver, 0.02uH/ft, 6pF/ft). Acoustic Zen as well as Audioquest and many others must believe that metal makes a difference since they use 99.99999% pure copper and silver.