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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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I have no desire to fool with it personally but this page contains
significant errors. One is that it does not differentiate between the longframe, or even acknowledge its existence per se, and the common 1/4" "phone plug". It does talk about bantam plugs, indicating some concept of professional use knowledge. Longframe and consumer 1/4' jacks are NOT interchangeable and will damage each other's connectors. Why there are two such standards, in fact, is beyond me, but there are. Of course one only needs to look at 50 vs. 75 ohm BNC connectors...or the four pin pre-modular telephone plugs which existed in at least three incompatible sizes.... From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search TRS connector TRS connector "Triple contact plug" as described in 1907. "Triple contact plug" as described in 1907. A TRS connector, also called an audio jack, phone plug, jack plug, stereo plug, mini-jack, or mini-stereo, is a common audio connector. It is cylindrical in shape, typically with three contacts, although sometimes with two (a TS connector) or four (a TRRS connector). It was invented for use in telephone switchboards in the 19th century and is still widely used, both in its original quarter-inch (6.3 mm) size and in miniaturized versions. The connector's name is an initialism derived from the names of three conducting parts of the plug: Tip, Ring, and Sleeve[1] – hence, TRS. In the UK, the terms jack plug and jack socket are commonly used for the respectively male and female TRS connectors.[2] In the U.S., a female connector is called a jack. The terms phone plug and phone jack are commonly used to refer to TRS connectors,[3] but are also sometimes used colloquially to refer to RJ11 and older telephone plugs and the corresponding jacks that connect wired telephones to wall outlets. (The similar terms phono plug and phono jack refers to RCA connectors.) To unambiguously refer to the connectors described here, the diameter or other qualifier is often added, e.g. 1/4-inch phone plug", "3.5 mm phone jack, and balanced phone jack or stereo phone plug for the three-contact version. Contents [hide] * 1 Modern connectors * 2 Mono and stereo compatibility * 3 Uses * 4 Switch contacts * 5 Tip/ring/sleeve terminology o 5.1 Usage + 5.1.1 Audio + 5.1.2 Computer sound + 5.1.3 Recording equipment o 5.2 Aircraft headsets * 6 Configurations and schematic symbols * 7 Color Codes * 8 See also * 9 References * 10 External links [edit] Modern connectors This section does not cite any references or sources. (August 2007) Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. 2.5 mm (3/32") mono (TS), 3.5 mm (1/8") mono and stereo (TRS), and 6.3 mm (1/4") stereo (TRS) jack plugs 2.5 mm (3/32") mono (TS), 3.5 mm (1/8") mono and stereo (TRS), and 6.3 mm (1/4") stereo (TRS) jack plugs Modern TS and TRS connectors are available in three standard sizes. The original 1/4" (6.35 mm) version dates from 1878, for use in manual telephone exchanges—making it possibly the oldest electrical connector standard still in use. The 3.5 mm or miniature and 2.5 mm or subminiature sizes were originally designed as two-conductor connectors for earpieces on transistor radios. The 3.5 mm and 2.5 mm sizes are also referred to as 1/8" and 3/32" respectively in the United States, though those dimensions are only approximations. All three sizes are now readily available in two-conductor (unbalanced mono) and three-conductor (balanced mono or unbalanced stereo) versions. Four and five conductor versions of the 3.5 mm plug are used for certain applications. A four conductor version is becoming a de facto standard output connector for compact camcorders, providing stereo sound plus a video signal. This interface is also seen on some laptop computers. Proprietary interfaces using both four and five conductor versions exist, such as the audio connector on the first four generations of iPod MP3 players (the 5th generation player now uses a standard 3 conductor cable), where the extra conductors were used to supply power for accessories. There is also an optical connector used for TOSLINK (mainly on things like portable equipment; hi-fi separates and similar tend to use the standard square connector) that is the same size as a 3.5 mm jack. Sockets exist that can make either an optical connection to such a plug or an electrical connection to a stereo jack plug, such as the headphone jacks on many laptops. A three or four conductor version of the 2.5 mm plug is widely used on cell phone handsfree headsets, providing mono (three conductor) or stereo (four conductor) sound and a microphone input. It should be noted that the use of common stereo headphones with the 2.5 mm plug are often not compatible with this type of socket. Although relatively unknown in modern electronics, the professional audio world and the telecommunication industry rely heavily on tiny telephone (TT) connectors which use mid-size phone plugs with a 4.4 mm (0.173-inch) diameter shaft. In the telecom world, this is known as a "bantam" plug. Due to their compactness and reliability, TTs are often used for professional console and outboard patchbays in studios and live sound applications, in which a single patch panel may require hundreds of patch points in a limited space. The TRS versions of TT connectors are capable of handling balanced line signals and are preferred in pro audio installations. Both two-conductor and three-conductor versions of the three standard sizes are readily available in male and female inline versions, and panel-mounting female versions. Panel-mounting male versions of these also exist but are rare, as they are vulnerable to mechanical damage and therefore unreliable. Female inline versions are also notoriously unreliable and are avoided by many users. The most common arrangement remains to have the male plug on the cable and the female socket mounted in a piece of equipment: the original intention of the design. A considerable variety of line plugs and panel sockets is available, including plugs suiting various cable sizes, right angle plugs, and both plugs and sockets in a variety of price ranges and with current capacities up to 15 amperes for certain heavy duty 1/4" versions. Less commonly used sizes, both diameters and lengths, are also available from some manufacturers, and are used when it is desired to restrict the availability of matching connectors, such as .210 inch inside diameter jacks for fire safety communication jacks in public buildings, the same size found in vintage 16mm projector speaker jacks. [4] A dual 310 patch cable, two pin jack plug A dual 310 patch cable, two pin jack plug * A two-pin version, known to the telecom industry as a "310 connector" consists of two TRS 6.3 mm jack plugs at a centre spacing of 1". The socket versions of these can be used with normal jack plugs provided the plug bodies are not too large, but the plug version will only mate with two jack sockets at 1" centre spacing, or with line sockets, again with sufficiently small bodies. These connectors are still widely used today in telephone company central offices on "DSX" patch panels for DS1 circuits. A similar type of 3.5 mm connector is often used in the armrests of aircraft, as part of the on-board entertainment system. Plugging a stereo plug into one of the two mono jacks typically results in the audio coming into only one ear. Adaptors are available. * A short-barrelled version also exists, once used on high- impedance mono headphones, and in particular those used in World War II aircraft. It is physically possible to use a normal plug in a short socket, but a short plug will neither lock into a normal socket nor complete the tip circuit. These are still manufactured but are now regarded as a non-standard size. [edit] Mono and stereo compatibility This section does not cite any references or sources. (August 2007) Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. Old profile jack plugs. The leftmost plug has three conductors; the others have two.At the top is a three-conductor jack from the same era. Old profile jack plugs. The leftmost plug has three conductors; the others have two. At the top is a three-conductor jack from the same era. Modern profile 2-conductor 1/4" jack plugs. Modern profile 2-conductor 1/4" jack plugs. In the original application in manual telephone exchanges, many different configurations of 1/4" jack plug were used, some accommodating five or more conductors, with several tip profiles. Of these many varieties, only the two-conductor version with a rounded tip profile was compatible between different manufacturers, and this was the design that was at first adopted for use with microphones, electric guitars, headphones, loudspeakers, and many other items of audio equipment. When a three-conductor version of the 1/4" jack was introduced for use with stereo headphones, it was given a sharper tip profile in order to make it possible to manufacture jacks (sockets) that would accept only stereo plugs, to avoid short-circuiting the right channel amplifier. This attempt has long been abandoned, and now the normal convention is that all plugs fit all sockets of the same size, regardless of whether they are balanced mono, unbalanced mono or stereo. Most 1/4" plugs, mono or stereo, now have the profile of the original stereo plug, although a few rounded mono plugs are also still produced. The profiles of stereo miniature and subminiature plugs have always been identical to the mono plugs of the same size. The results of this physical compatibility a * If a two-conductor plug of the same size is connected to a three- conductor socket, the result is that the ring (right channel) of the socket is grounded. This property is deliberately used in several applications, see "tip ring sleeve", below. However, grounding one channel may also be dangerous to the equipment if the result is to short circuit the output of the right channel amplifier. In any case, any signal from the right channel is naturally lost. * If a three-conductor plug is connected to a two-conductor socket, normally the result is to leave the ring of the plug unconnected (open circuit). In the days of valves ("tubes" in the U.S.) this was also potentially dangerous to equipment but most solid state devices tolerate this condition well. A 3-conductor socket could be wired as an unbalanced mono socket to ground the ring in this situation, but the more conventional wiring is to leave the ring unconnected, exactly simulating a mono socket. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TRS_connector |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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In article
, ScottW wrote: On Jun 22, 6:29*am, RapidRonnie wrote: *I have no desire to fool with it personally but this page contains significant errors. I think the life of Wikipedia is coming to a close. http://news.scotsman.com/education/F...med.4209408.jp Several further education institutions have already banned students from using the interactive encyclopaedia. At one college in Vermont in the US, a history professor found several students repeated the same error in exam papers. On discovering the information came from Wikipedia, the college outlawed its future use. Ms Coner said overuse of the internet also meant students did not develop interpretative skills. She said: "Pupils are in danger of believing what they read. It's part of our short-cut culture, where we will do anything to pass a test, without properly engaging with the information or questions that are being asked. "It's all very well to glance at a website for research, but you have to check what you are reading is correct. Anything can be untrue. I can claim to be a world expert on anything if I set up a website on the internet." and here we have a funny tip into the secret identity of the famed RAO writer, George. "LAST week I heard the writer Colin Bateman describe how, on looking himself up on Wikipedia, he was dismayed to discover that his young son had gone online and added the sentence: "Mr Bateman is currently suffering from penile dysfunction." Fortunately his dad saw the funny side * and was proud his child could spell "dysfunction" correctly. Who else would be proud of this? ScottW All true. Most of our profs don't allow Wiki as a quoted source either. |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() RapidRonnie wrote: I have no desire to fool with it personally but this page contains significant errors. One is that it does not differentiate between the longframe, or even acknowledge its existence per se, and the common 1/4" "phone plug". It does talk about bantam plugs, indicating some concept of professional use knowledge. So which bits EXACTLY are you complaining about ? Graham |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() Jenn said: Most of our profs don't allow Wiki as a quoted source either. You mean some of them DO allow it? That's astonishing. |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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In article ,
George M. Middius wrote: Jenn said: Most of our profs don't allow Wiki as a quoted source either. You mean some of them DO allow it? That's astonishing. I doubt if any do, but I haven't read everyone's syllabus so I can't say for certain. |
#6
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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In article ,
"Soundhaspriority" wrote: "Jenn" wrote in message ... In article , George M. Middius wrote: Jenn said: Most of our profs don't allow Wiki as a quoted source either. You mean some of them DO allow it? That's astonishing. I doubt if any do, but I haven't read everyone's syllabus so I can't say for certain. Even when I was an undergrad, using an encyclopedia as a reference was actually a point of criticism, leading to a severely reduced grade. Research implies getting as close to the sources as possible, which at the very least, means reading the publications of the researchers themselves. Yep. From what I hear, Wikipedia continues to grow in size and patronage. It's a great starting point. Yes, if taken with a grain of salt. Bob Morein (310) 237-6511 |
#7
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On 22 Iun, 14:18, "ScottW" wrote:
"Soundhaspriority" wrote in message ... "Jenn" wrote in message .... In article , George M. Middius wrote: Jenn said: Most of our profs don't allow Wiki as a quoted source either. You mean some of them DO allow it? That's astonishing. I doubt if any do, but I haven't read everyone's syllabus so I can't say for certain. Even when I was an undergrad, using an encyclopedia as a reference was actually a point of criticism, leading to a severely reduced grade. Research implies getting as close to the sources as possible, which at the very least, means reading the publications of the researchers themselves. *So repeating what a researcher wrote is also research. *Somehow I think the terms should be different. Maybe there should be searchers...and researchers. Need to differentiate more between between breaking new ground and going over old ground. Just MO which I offer for free and uncorrupted by money. ScottW- everything you do at work is corrupted. Unless you volunteer. anything you read in any mag or newspaper is corrupted every opinion you hear on tv or radio is corrupted Read the dailyKos, they don't get paid. |
#8
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On 22 Iun, 15:43, MiNe 109 wrote:
In article , *Clyde Slick wrote: On 22 Iun, 14:18, "ScottW" wrote: "Soundhaspriority" wrote in message m... "Jenn" wrote in message ... In article , George M. Middius wrote: Jenn said: Most of our profs don't allow Wiki as a quoted source either. You mean some of them DO allow it? That's astonishing. I doubt if any do, but I haven't read everyone's syllabus so I can't say for certain. Even when I was an undergrad, using an encyclopedia as a reference was actually a point of criticism, leading to a severely reduced grade. Research implies getting as close to the sources as possible, which at the very least, means reading the publications of the researchers themselves. *So repeating what a researcher wrote is also research. *Somehow I think the terms should be different. Maybe there should be searchers...and researchers. Need to differentiate more between between breaking new ground and going over old ground. Just MO which I offer for free and uncorrupted by money. ScottW- everything you do at work is corrupted. Unless you volunteer. anything you read in any mag *or newspaper is corrupted every opinion you hear on tv or radio is corrupted Read the dailyKos, they don't get paid. Property is theft. spoken like a true commie! BTW, let me have all of yours. |
#9
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() MiNe 109 said: Property is theft. ¿Cómo? |
#10
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On 22 Iun, 16:50, Signal wrote:
Clyde Slick wrote: everything you do at work is corrupted. Unless you volunteer. anything you read in any mag *or newspaper is corrupted every opinion you hear on tv or radio is corrupted That opinion doesn't tally with the Wiki entry on curruption. :-) -- \ I am following Scott's line of reasoning to its conclusion. |
#11
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On 23 Iun, 00:40, "ScottW" wrote:
"Clyde Slick" wrote in message ... On 22 Iun, 16:50, Signal wrote: Clyde Slick wrote: everything you do at work is corrupted. Unless you volunteer. anything you read in any mag or newspaper is corrupted every opinion you hear on tv or radio is corrupted That opinion doesn't tally with the Wiki entry on curruption. :-) -- \ :I am following Scott's line of reasoning to its conclusion. *Extrapolation is a sign that the data doesn't support your current position. ScottW LOL!!!!!! Gimme a break!!!! "YOU" were the source of the data. thanks for making my point. |
#12
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On Jun 22, 11:40*pm, "ScottW" wrote:
"Clyde Slick" wrote in message On 22 Iun, 16:50, Signal wrote: Clyde Slick wrote: everything you do at work is corrupted. Unless you volunteer. anything you read in any mag or newspaper is corrupted every opinion you hear on tv or radio is corrupted That opinion doesn't tally with the Wiki entry on curruption. :-) :I am following Scott's line of reasoning to its conclusion. *Extrapolation is a sign that the data doesn't support your current position. Clyde is using a logically-sound argument called "Reductio Ad Absurdum", 2pid. Read about it he http://www.iep.utm.edu/r/reductio.htm The fact that you don't know about this is not surprising. You're an imbecile. Arguments are either true or false, 2pid. Yours is false, but most of your arguments are. Don't worry, we're used to it. LoL |
#13
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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IME the vast majority of telco and studio people do not know that "actual
phone plugs" and "phone plugs that fit guitars and headphones that aren't really phone plugs" are two different and noninterchangeable things. How the common pseudo-phone plug got invented is the real question. Maybe it was to dodge WE patents? There also used to be a lot of different "standards" for the "common phone plug" to where even into the 60s they often didn't quite interchange properly. -- Message posted using http://www.talkaboutaudio.com/group/rec.audio.opinion/ More information at http://www.talkaboutaudio.com/faq.html |
#14
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On Jun 23, 12:25*pm, ScottW wrote:
On Jun 22, 10:24*pm, Clyde Slick wrote: On 23 Iun, 00:40, "ScottW" wrote: "Clyde Slick" wrote in message .... On 22 Iun, 16:50, Signal wrote: Clyde Slick wrote: everything you do at work is corrupted. Unless you volunteer. anything you read in any mag or newspaper is corrupted every opinion you hear on tv or radio is corrupted That opinion doesn't tally with the Wiki entry on curruption. :-) :I am following Scott's line of reasoning to its conclusion. *Extrapolation is a sign that the data doesn't support your current position. LOL!!!!!! Gimme a break!!!! "YOU" were the source of the data. thanks for making my point. Let me help you out Art. extrapolation: to project, extend, or expand (known data or experience) into an area not known or experienced so as to arrive at a usually conjectural knowledge of the unknown area Let me try to help you out here, 2pid: "Reductio Ad Absurdum": Disproof of a proposition by showing that it leads to absurd or untenable conclusions. If you take your imbecilic argument to its logical conclusion, Clyde is right and you are wrong. |
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