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#41
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"Gareth Magennis" wrote in
message I'm with George on this. I have just run over a Neutrik XLR in my car about 20 times and I can't break it. How about someone with a truck doing the same thing? Oh, George has already done that. I figure that a heavily-loaded fork lift with steel wheels rolling over a XLR end on a concrete or heavy steel-plate floor, might cause the plastic on a Neutrik crack. Probably bend the metal, too. I've got images of bored roadies lining mic cords up on the floor and then taking bets on who can steer the fork lift straight enough, long enough, to nail the most connectors. Just wait - Neutrik will come out with XLRs with a heavy titanium shell that protects the threaded insert. |
#42
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![]() I don't see any need to get upset about it; or making up wild stories (a bulldozer? I'd like to see that one...maybe on soft ground, but....) to support my decision. jak bulldozer at Poags Hole AMA hillclimb(same place the motorcycle ran over my wires) out of now where this d-6 came rumbling through to recut the start finish area on the hill www.poagshole.com george |
#43
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George Gleason wrote:
bulldozer at Poags Hole AMA hillclimb(same place the motorcycle ran over my wires) out of now where this d-6 came rumbling through to recut the start finish area on the hill Never had a bulldozer, but I have had cranes, Genie lifts, remote trucks, generator trucks, an ATM truck sliding down a hill of mud with people chasing after it, beer trucks, riding mowers, and horses all run over cables. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#44
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![]() "Scott Dorsey" wrote in message ... George Gleason wrote: bulldozer at Poags Hole AMA hillclimb(same place the motorcycle ran over my wires) out of now where this d-6 came rumbling through to recut the start finish area on the hill Never had a bulldozer, but I have had cranes, Genie lifts, remote trucks, generator trucks, an ATM truck sliding down a hill of mud with people chasing after it, beer trucks, riding mowers, and horses all run over cables. --scott what scared me was the same bulldozer smashed over a length of energized 6/4 feeder cable as well hindsight is always 20/20 we now have a piece of angle iron acting as a cable cover george |
#45
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"Gareth Magennis" wrote:
I'm with George on this. I have just run over a Neutrik XLR in my car about 20 times and I can't break it. That's not how they break. You gotta reach for your coffee while holding a mic, a stand and a cable. When the cable slips between your fingers and falls to the floor, THEN it will break. The other way to break them is to plug them in really fast 'cause the drummer was late and you're on the air in six minutes. Spin the connector to line up the pins and the catch snaps. It's interesting that driving a tank over them won't break them, 'cause just stepping on them sure will. Maybe it has something to do with weight distribution. At least that's been our experience. We've ruined scores of 'em in just seven or eight years of live TV. I don't think any other brand would have been any better, but I can personally refute any claim that the Neutriks are somehow impervious to damage from normal use. We work 'em hard, maybe harder than a typical studio, but we don't have any tanks or trucks in the studio and ours still break regularly. -- "It CAN'T be too loud... some of the red lights aren't even on yet!" - Lorin David Schultz in the control room making even bad news sound good (Remove spamblock to reply) |
#46
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George Gleason wrote:
I don't see any need to get upset about it; or making up wild stories (a bulldozer? I'd like to see that one...maybe on soft ground, but....) to support my decision. jak bulldozer at Poags Hole AMA hillclimb(same place the motorcycle ran over my wires) out of now where this d-6 came rumbling through to recut the start finish area on the hill www.poagshole.com george Yup, soft ground, indeed. Try the same thing on a concrete floor...or fill the roadcase a little too full and slam the lid on one. They'll all break. jak |
#47
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On Fri, 10 Mar 2006 18:26:32 -0600, jakdedert wrote:
George Gleason wrote: I don't see any need to get upset about it; or making up wild stories (a bulldozer? I'd like to see that one...maybe on soft ground, but....) to support my decision. jak bulldozer at Poags Hole AMA hillclimb(same place the motorcycle ran over my wires) out of now where this d-6 came rumbling through to recut the start finish area on the hill www.poagshole.com george Yup, soft ground, indeed. Try the same thing on a concrete floor...or fill the roadcase a little too full and slam the lid on one. They'll all break. Most of the time I've had them break from inexperienced theatre tecs doing the get-out. Things like winding the multicore by just pulling from the stage end, or getting bits of set dropped on them. jak |
#48
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![]() Scott Dorsey wrote: Walt wrote: I'm probably talking about the original X model. I try to dig up an actual example. The XX is definitely less prone to breaking than the original X model. But they can still break. I am going to refrain from making any comments about Teamsters today. Because some of them are careful guys. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." I keep seeing these Neutrik "X-HD Series" connectors, but have never ordered them. Are they any stronger, or just more parts to break? Did these replace the "Mill Spec" Neutrik? I thought Canon had abandoned the little screws for a Neutrik knock off, i've seen a few of these floating around. It was good day when Neutrik got rid of that threaded strain relief crap, and the little screws. |
#49
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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Lorin David Schultz wrote:
"Gareth Magennis" wrote: I'm with George on this. I have just run over a Neutrik XLR in my car about 20 times and I can't break it. That's not how they break. You gotta reach for your coffee while holding a mic, a stand and a cable. When the cable slips between your fingers and falls to the floor, THEN it will break. The other way to break them is to plug them in really fast 'cause the drummer was late and you're on the air in six minutes. Spin the connector to line up the pins and the catch snaps. It's interesting that driving a tank over them won't break them, 'cause just stepping on them sure will. Maybe it has something to do with weight distribution. At least that's been our experience. We've ruined scores of 'em in just seven or eight years of live TV. I don't think any other brand would have been any better, but I can personally refute any claim that the Neutriks are somehow impervious to damage from normal use. We work 'em hard, maybe harder than a typical studio, but we don't have any tanks or trucks in the studio and ours still break regularly. The only failure I commonly see, and it is endemic to all XLR connectors with metal bodied, is that the male end gets driven over, stepped on, dropped from height onto hard surface, and the shell is knocked out of round enough to no longer plug in. I've found Neutriks no more or less durable than other brands from reputable makers. There are cheap chinese XLRs out there that rather than bend, the metal cracks and shatters. But they are nameless connectors that show up at local shops in the dollar bin. --Dale |
#50
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![]() Dale Farmer wrote: The only failure I commonly see, and it is endemic to all XLR connectors with metal bodied, is that the male end gets driven over, stepped on, dropped from height onto hard surface, and the shell is knocked out of round enough to no longer plug in. I've found Neutriks no more or less durable than other brands from reputable makers. There are cheap chinese XLRs out there that rather than bend, the metal cracks and shatters. In an emergency, there might be an advantage to this. If the shell shatters, you don't have an oval peg that you're trying to put in a round hole. You can plug in the insert without the shell and use it until someone trips over the cable and pulls it out. I used to like acetate tape better than mylar back when I had tape decks that didn't handle tape very gently because rather than stretching out, it would break cleanly. |