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#1
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Questions for the masters.
1) I have my preamp mounted in a rack case. The xlr female inputs are very inaccessible deep in the back. Especially in the dark. I had the idea to mount a 1RU strip at the back of the case with female chassi-mounted xlrs. A (very) short snake of sorts, but... these are supposed to be mounted in a metal box forming a faraday cage, not out in the free air so there will be about 1-1,5 cm exposed signal path without shield. The solder cups on the back of the xlr. Does this matter for mic level signals? 2) (unrelated to (1)) Should signal ground be connected to the case in a snake/stagebox? I believe signal ground should be connected to the xlr connector exterior in a mic cable, thus connecting signal ground to the box. A stagebox might also carry line level things that might introduce hum like i.e. keyboard direct remotely powered from another mains socket. Perhaps groundlifting should be taken care of before the stage box rather than after? best regards Lars -- lars farm // http://www.farm.se lars is also a mail-account on the server farm.se aim: |
#2
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Lars Farm wrote:
Questions for the masters. 1) I have my preamp mounted in a rack case. The xlr female inputs are very inaccessible deep in the back. Especially in the dark. I had the idea to mount a 1RU strip at the back of the case with female chassi-mounted xlrs. A (very) short snake of sorts, but... these are supposed to be mounted in a metal box forming a faraday cage, not out in the free air so there will be about 1-1,5 cm exposed signal path without shield. The solder cups on the back of the xlr. Does this matter for mic level signals? Probably OK in a metal rack case as long as there's no source of interference close to it inside the case. But there's only one way to really find out. 2) (unrelated to (1)) Should signal ground be connected to the case in a snake/stagebox? Read this: http://www.rane.com/note151.html I don't think you'll find any "signal ground" in a stage box. Plenty of chassis ground, and they should all be connected together, including the casing. Anahata |
#3
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Anahata wrote:
Probably OK in a metal rack case as long as there's no source of interference close to it inside the case. It's one of them black SKB plastic cases open on both front and back so I suppose one could consider it out in the open. But there's only one way to really find out. At the seventh location recording from now when the sky is lit by northern lights and someone's mobile receives an SMS... Ah, well back to the drawing board... thanks Lars -- lars farm // http://www.farm.se lars is also a mail-account on the server farm.se aim: |
#4
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On 10/10/05 11:13 AM, in article
1h487je.1cndsv81c869csN%see.bottom.of.page.for.lar , "Lars Farm" wrote: Questions for the masters. 1) I have my preamp mounted in a rack case. The xlr female inputs are very inaccessible deep in the back. Especially in the dark. I had the idea to mount a 1RU strip at the back of the case with female chassi-mounted xlrs. A (very) short snake of sorts, but... these are supposed to be mounted in a metal box forming a faraday cage, not out in the free air so there will be about 1-1,5 cm exposed signal path without shield. The solder cups on the back of the xlr. Does this matter for mic level signals? Not usually. (or else a number of major broadcast networks and installs I've worked for wouldn't have functioned!). I'd go ahead and make the extension and panel the way you describe. Use a good shielded cable and keep your shield as far up to the solder connections as possible. 2) (unrelated to (1)) Should signal ground be connected to the case in a snake/stagebox? I believe signal ground should be connected to the xlr connector exterior in a mic cable, thus connecting signal ground to the box. A stagebox might also carry line level things that might introduce hum like i.e. keyboard direct remotely powered from another mains socket. Perhaps groundlifting should be taken care of before the stage box rather than after? This is situation-dependant (Unless it's a studio installation as opposed to a location recording thing). The BEST way would be to have each line on the snake with a switch to lift the shield-to-case connection for that line. I have had this fail BOTH ways and in two instances have NEVER figured out what the heck was the problem. I still have a 50' 6-ch mic snake that's just about unusable due to its uncanny ability to invent hum and buzz at low levels in different lines with seemingly magical causes. Nothing tests miswired on the snake, it just has different problems on different lines and is a huge RFI-attractor. Substituting single cables or a different snake solves the problem. |
#5
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Lars Farm wrote:
Questions for the masters. 1) I have my preamp mounted in a rack case. The xlr female inputs are very inaccessible deep in the back. Especially in the dark. I had the idea to mount a 1RU strip at the back of the case with female chassi-mounted xlrs. A (very) short snake of sorts, but... these are supposed to be mounted in a metal box forming a faraday cage, not out in the free air so there will be about 1-1,5 cm exposed signal path without shield. The solder cups on the back of the xlr. Does this matter for mic level signals? Yes. Buy a sheet metal chassis for $10 or that you can screw into the back of the panel for some shielding. 2) (unrelated to (1)) Should signal ground be connected to the case in a snake/stagebox? I believe signal ground should be connected to the xlr connector exterior in a mic cable, thus connecting signal ground to the box. A stagebox might also carry line level things that might introduce hum like i.e. keyboard direct remotely powered from another mains socket. Perhaps groundlifting should be taken care of before the stage box rather than after? The overall shield on the snake goes to the case. It is not connected to the individual "pin 1" signal grounds on each channel, except maybe at ONE point somewhere in the system. Having the ability to lift this can be handy, though, since sometimes racks get additional ground paths between them due to power system issues in the field. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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