• @bstix
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      47 months ago

      It locks, is more durable and balanced.

        • @bstix
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          27 months ago

          It reduces noise from interference.

          An unbalanced cable has two wires. A ground and the signal. The audio is the difference between the two. A guitar cable is unbalanced.

          A balanced cable has 3 wires. A ground, a signal (+ hot) and a signal with opposite polarity (- cold). The receiver will flip the polarity of the cold signal and add the two signals. The result is that any interference that happens in the cable is also flipped on the cold signal and thereby cancels the interference on the hot signal.

          Put in like math: let’s say your audio is 3x and noise is 0.5y An unbalanced cable would deliver 3x + 0.5y =noise being added to the output.

          A balanced cable would deliver “hot” 3x + 0.5y and “cold” -3x +0.5y. The receiver flips the cold resulting in 3x+0.5y +3x -0.5y =6x + 0y. This can then be divided by 2 resulting in the correct 3x and no noise.

            • @bstix
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              17 months ago

              Yeah, a guitar output is a mono unbalanced two wire 1/4" TS jack.

              Of course there are people who make guitars with custom wiring, but the standard is TS. 2 wires: tip and sleeve.

              You can use a stereo/balanced TRS jack with 3 wires,? (Tip, Ring Sleeve) but only because those are sort of compatible with TS. It won’t actually be balanced.

              • @jackpot@lemmy.mlOP
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                7 months ago

                so whyd you start off with saying it’s balanced if it’s unvalanced andbwhy dont guitars come balacned

                • @bstix
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                  27 months ago

                  I said it would be better for guitars to use XLR, because XLR are balanced.