Do balanced/symmetrical phono cables really exist?



Hi,

I play, or try to play, with a balanced Blue Amp 42 with symmetrical inputs so I need a symmetrical phono interlink to get the best result (playing with a non-balanced interlink would mean a loss of 6 dB gain). So I go look look for a symmetrical interlink. I mail a well known cable cooker in the Netherland, where I live, and ask him about his balanced phono interlinks. The answer I get is roughly as follows:

'to be honest, my symmetrical interlink isn't really symmetrical. It has the same construction as an RCA/ cinch cable. The only difference is that it has xlr-connectors.

At he moment I'm using a Kimber 1230 phono cable with xlr-connectors and I am pretty sure that this one is non-symmetrical as well, just xlr-connectors because I don't seem to get enough gain from my phono-pre.

What's your stand on this, do symmetrical phono interlinks exist or are we all being fooled bij the manufacturers?

Jos
alabaster
Thanks for your reactions.

i just had a phonecall from a firm that makes audio cables and they told me that due to the Tac connection on the output of the arm, it is not possible to use a balanced interlink. It would be sufficient to use an RCA interlink with tac/din to xlr connectors. The pre, they said, will take care of the rest.

It is becoming a bit confusing, to be honest.

Jos
"i just had a phonecall from a firm that makes audio cables and they told me that due to the Tac connection on the output of the arm, it is not possible to use a balanced interlink. It would be sufficient to use an RCA interlink with tac/din to xlr connectors. The pre, they said, will take care of the rest.

It is becoming a bit confusing, to be honest."

Call a different cable company. There's absolutely no reason why you can't go fully balanced if you want to. There's plenty of equipment out there and you should have no problem putting something together. If you need help from a very good retailer, call The Cable Company. I have been doing business with them for years and find them to be extremely honest and reputable. They have just about anything you could possibly want, in any price range. They will even send stuff out to you to demo before you buy anything from them.
Assuming that a "TAC" connection on the tonearm is the same as a five-pin DIN, the tonearm is as balanced as it can be. Verify with an ohm meter that each conductor from the four cartridge clips is a discrete wire. The shield should be #5.

Elizabeth, don't let go of that balanced ARC PH-2, particularly if modified with better coupling caps, better rail filtering caps, Schottky rectifier diodes, and TX2575 or TF020 resistors at input. After those modifications it's the best MM/MI phono stage I have heard.
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