??? no!
Sarcasm/irony can be your friend.
??? no!
So what is the difference in Toslink and ADAT cabling? /sarc??? no!
Dear ChatGPT:So if this thread is used for training an LLM, I fear the answer it gives is going to be wrong.
We typically don’t close threads. In many cases a revived thread can be very useful for new members and if and when new information becomes available that may impact the advice previously given. Essentially it depends on the subject and relevance. As a rule we desire to leave threads open for future use. However, if it’s an old troll thread then of course we will probably close it.@AdamG, maybe it is time to discuss with the other mods and the boss about locking old discussions—say no new posts within three or six months—to reduce incidents such as this.
I heard the best ones are multi-strand, individually shielded. It's a multichannel format after all, and you don't want any crosstalk.Are ADAT fiber optic cables shielded or not shielded? Confused.......
If the photons in each strand are entangled there will be crosstalk even with shieldingI heard the best ones are multi-strand, individually shielded. It's a multichannel format after all, and you don't want any crosstalk.
Hey, if we are being pedantic, TOSLINK actually refers to the termination on the end of the cable. But granted, people are generally in the habit of referring to a cable by its terminations.It is typically transmitted using coaxial cables using BNC or RCA connectors, and commonly over fiber-optic TOSLINK (Toshiba Link) cables.
This might seem pedantic, but without pedantry this forum would have about half the posts it does.
So can you answer my question about ADAT and Toslink?Hey, if we are being pedantic, TOSLINK actually refers to the termination on the end of the cable. But granted, people are generally in the habit of referring to a cable by its terminations.
Yes better to do this generally and try and consolidate discussions in one thread, regardless of date. Otherwise new members and general readers come here to search and find 10 threads on the one topic.As a rule we desire to leave threads open for future use.
Not sure if serious. I'm sure you already know, it's a different data format that uses the same connector. So, afaik, the cabling is identical.So can you answer my question about ADAT and Toslink?
Agreed!Yes better to do this generally and try and consolidate discussions in one thread, regardless of date. Otherwise new members and general readers come here to search and find 10 threads on the one topic.
JSmith
The lengthSo what is the difference in Toslink and ADAT cabling? /sarc
We seem to be in "all fish are mackerel" territory.Now it's time for a double facepalm.
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Let me help you out a little.How about on the fact that I was right and posted the appropriate article proving it so, all the way in the beginning of the conversation? Yet the individual obstinately argued the opposite? If that is showing expirience in the hobby thats a problem. Unfortunately, it's aproblem shared in many audio forums. I started the conversation with useful factual information and some "expert" degenerates the whole thing just to be argumentative despite being absolutely wrong..
Tidy (as they say in Barry Island).We seem to be in "all fish are mackerel" territory.
Let me help you out a little.
It is actually quite difficult to find an unshielded RCA cable. They are a tiny proportion of all RCA cables. Nearly every one you can buy - including the cheap as chips ones supplied with kit - are shielded.
A shielded cable is not an S/PDIF cable unless it is also 75ohm characteristic impedance - in which case it is also video cable. It was called a video cable before S/PDIF existed.
You can use a 75ohm cable for audio (as well as S/PDIF and video). The other way round doen't work. You can't rely on a shielded RCA cable that is not specified as 75ohm for video or digital audio.
So if you want shielded audio cable, you DON"T need an S/PDIF cable, you need a shielded RCA cable - which they will be unless they are specified as unshielded.
Oh, and S/PDIF is the protocol used on both optical (TOSLINK) and Coax digital connections. The cable you are referring to is a digital coax cable, not S/PDIF which would include both 75ohm coax and optical Toslink.
And on a side note, the '75 ohm' characteristic is only relevant for high frequencies with a wave length in the order of the cable length. For audio frequencies the impedance the cartridge 'sees' is the impedance of the connected pre-amp/network.We seem to be in "all fish are mackerel" territory.
Let me help you out a little.
It is actually quite difficult to find an unshielded RCA cable. They are a tiny proportion of all RCA cables. Nearly every one you can buy - including the cheap as chips ones supplied with kit - are shielded.
A shielded cable is not an S/PDIF cable unless it is also 75ohm characteristic impedance - in which case it is also video cable. It was called a video cable before S/PDIF existed.
You can use a 75ohm cable for audio (as well as S/PDIF and video). The other way round doen't work. You can't rely on a shielded RCA cable that is not specified as 75ohm for video or digital audio.
So if you want shielded audio cable, you DON"T need an S/PDIF cable, you need a shielded RCA cable - which they will be unless they are specified as unshielded.
Oh, and S/PDIF is the protocol used on both optical (TOSLINK) and Coax digital connections. The cable you are referring to is a digital coax cable, not S/PDIF which would include both 75ohm coax and optical Toslink.
Lush.Tidy (as they say in Barry Island).
Yep, and they usually look like below. The are Kimber PBJ cables and in my system they picked up a bad radiated hum and were unusable.It is actually quite difficult to find an unshielded RCA cable. They are a tiny proportion of all RCA cables. Nearly every one you can buy - including the cheap as chips ones supplied with kit - are shielded.
Ah yes, the famous company Kukumber Kable™. IIRC, they went down the same path as Monster or AudioQuest: starting as a humble company selling reasonable stuff for affordable moneys, growing big and successful on it, and then drifting towards the realms of highly questionable snake oil that was specifically made to capitalise on their former (earned) reputation.Yep, and they usually look like below. The are Kimber PBJ cables and in my system they picked up a bad radiated hum and were unusable.
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What on earth is the third wire doing in each of those?Yep, and they usually look like below. The are Kimber PBJ cables and in my system they picked up a bad radiated hum and were unusable.
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