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I wrote Vinnie, and he believes that crimping makes for a superior connection over soldering, and the noise rejection of the RG-59 coax is superior, too. I guess it comes down to quality components carefully chosen and properly made
Vinnie, are the prices for these listed somewhere on your site, or are they custom, and priced according to spec?
Yes, I believe that crimping the true 75-ohm BNC connectors using proper crimping tools (which make a stronger, more reliable connection than solder connectors) onto 75-ohm RG-59 coax is THE WAY to go with digital cables.
Caveat emptor.Vinnie claims his BNC connectors are “true-75 ohm,” but how do you know they are really “true 75-ohm?” Because Vinnie says so? I haven’t seen the ends of Vinnie’s cables so I don’t know if they are 75- or 50-ohm, but judging from the pictures of the Red Wine Audio Reali-T and the repackaged Scott Nixon DAC, Vinnie doesn’t know, either. You see, both pictures clearly show a 50-ohm BNC.Caveat emptor.When I called this discrepancy to Vinnie’s attention, he assured me his BNCs were 75- ...
The BNC jacks that I ordered are supposed to be 75-ohm. It looks like a mistake was made and I am waiting to hear back. It is entirely possible that I made the mistake (maybe in typing in the part number during ordering process).
All that "caveat emptor" had me feeling like some nasty scam artist!
You, as an electrical engineer and proprietor of Red Wine Audio, should have verified that the components you purchased were correct.
What surprised me was that you were so confident your BNCs were 75-ohms