Can good IC's be used instead of dedicated phono's


I would like to change the el cheapo cabling on my turntable.

I do own some pretty transparent signature 2 XLO interconnects that I no longer use.

Do I really need to get dedicated phono cables ?
sonicbeauty
SonicBeauty....not at all....sometimes you don't even need a ground wire. Try it without it first (turn the volume down in case you do need it)
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You can use any cable at all for starters. Then work backward. If you have noise with an unshielded cable, then you need a shield. If you have hum, you need to play with grounding. If you have high frequency loss or gain, you need to play with capacitance. Etc.

Your XLO cables are a perfectly good place to start, if your tt has RCA output jacks, as someone else noted. If the phono cable goes direct into the base of the tonearm, then you probably need a cable with a female DIN plug at that end; one DIN plug carries signal for both channels and grounds.

By the way, shielding adds capacitance.
By the way, shielding adds capacitance.
Although, as is usually the case in audio, there are a multitude of variables that affect the bottom line of a given parameter. Blue Jeans LC-1, for example, even though it is NOT specifically intended for phono applications, and even though it is heavily shielded, and even though its cost is very low, has an extremely low capacitance of 12.2 pf/ft.

Best regards,
-- Al
Al, But I would guess that the capacitance would be even lower if there were no shield. Which was my point, altho I probably should have been more explicit. Geometry is the major determinant of the IC capacitance, but shielding adds to it. I think that is accurate, but I am open to enlightenment if not.