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...I am using a modified Piccolo in its own case. It was too noisy around the Hammond transformer when built into the C2 case work. It functioned, but it never delivered the silence I require.
My stand alone Piccolo in its Hammond case looks and sounds great. It produces the quietness I need to hear.
The stereo cartridge is a balanced signal from what I have read in various posts by the late Garth Philippe of Incognito. You can find these at the AudioAsylum vinyl board. There is no common ground in a stereo cartridge. It produces a purely differential positive and negative signal path of the right and left signal. Grab the appropriate ground and you have an unadulterated balanced signal.
you lengthen the tiny signal path just because of another case
Perhaps you are confusing a balanced source from a balanced circuit?
A stereo cartridge is purely differential.
A balanced amplification circuit cancels common noise in that particular circuit, but it does not and cannot cancel noise from the source.
There is no common mode noise in a stereo cartridge. Its a perfect source for a balanced circuit.
Path length is mostly a marketing panacea.
I would easily trade it for a reduction in hum or noise any day. Everything is a compromise, there are no perfect answers.
Nope! Differential - meaning the wires carry signals of opposite polarity to each other in the relation with the common ground. In the cartridge there is NO common ground as I stated earlier.
The cartridge signal is inherently differential
...a differential signal nothat can be forced into balanced operation by the input circuitry of the pre amplifier
As soon as the line (connection wires) from a turntable is not balanced (RCA forever) and the signal is not balanced as well you lose in the signal amplitude (you have to divide the signal to 2 to load both "wings" of a balanced preamp from the single source) and in the possibility to eliminate common noise (as I stated earlier-you need identical impedances of the source and the line and the input circuits).
I applaud you for having the courage to step over the language barrier to argue your point.
But I don't really see how your linked wiki entry is precluding the use of a phono cartridge for differential signaling.
It seems to me that you have added your own preferred conditions to the terms balanced and differential that just aren't part of the real definitions.
In a MM cartridge, the four pins of a cartridge are each connected to their own respective pole of a pair of inductors. These four wires carry two complementary pairs, meeting the condition for Differential Signaling (2n wires, where n is the number of signals to be transmitted). Whether or not these pairs are treated as differential or single-ended (n+1 wires, where n is the number of signals to be transmitted plus one voltage reference) is dictated by the input circuitry of the pre-amp or if the "returns" of the turntable RCA cables are tied together at some point (2n becomes n+1).
You can see from my reasoning above how RCAs can transmit a differential signal, right? Whether or not a RCA cable is ideal for this application is beside the point.
Now, you're correct that balanced signal transmission requires identical impedances to some voltage reference (this is the pivot point for the see-saw). So you would agree that, in this manner, a single-ended input can benefit from the common noise rejection of a balanced circuit via the simple balancing of impedances to the reference voltage? In other words, the advantages of a balanced circuit are obtained regardless of whether the input signal was differential or single-ended.
Dug open my old notes for variable EQ. The reference phono I've been working on for so many years (it keeps changing) had finally narrowed the EQ thing down to three positions (same as the Zanden folk). All of the microgroove can fit nicely into these categories, only the 78's get out of range.In the Cornet, C2, or C3, the second set of EQ is done using a 1nF capacitor. This is what needs to change. I re-did the calculations and came up with the three values needed:1) Two 680pF in parallel : Columbia/NAB2) One 1000pF : RIAA3) One 680pF : ffrr/EMIThe problem is switching into position will cause a huge "tic" or "thump" in the output. I thought of maybe keeping the unused positions charged up with a 1M bleeder, but this would only screw up EQ in the bass region.I'll look at possibly switching in/out resistors instead.jh
I don't like this. It's not about bleeding to ground. You have to bleed to the signal path that's in action. I don't want to put any extra parasitic RC time constants onto a live EQ. Sorry, I'm a bit anal about that sort of thing.If anything, it's a long time away. I just can't get to it right now. Can you imagine - I have a C3 board prototype mostly stuffed with parts - and it sits in a box. It feels very ignored and abandoned. Poor thing. jh
Cornet 3 is on hold for the moment. No idea when I can get back to it.