gimmeheadroom
Headphoneus Supremus
On my REF10 there is a separate ground lug. It seems this is a new feature, I don't see it in the pictures on the website. Does yours have it?
I believe not. The only connectors on mine are the 8 clock outputs and the AC input.On my REF10 there is a separate ground lug. It seems this is a new feature, I don't see it in the pictures on the website. Does yours have it?
Grounding on the OCK-2 between the three boards is carried out from board to board over the board connectors. LHY has taken care of correct grounding.To ground or not to ground?
Some have reported that attaching a ground box to a reference clock harmed rather than benefited the sound. This is not what I experienced with the Mutec Ref10 SE120 though: grounding it via an RCA-BNC adapter gave a clear improvement.
However, I just tried with the LHY OCK-2 and there indeed I prefer not to ground.
Not sure, but could this be related to the fact that on the Mutec one can deactivate individual clock outputs? My grounding was done on a deactivated output. On the OCK-2 this is not possible. Maybe grounding the OCK-2 other than via a BNC output would improve the sound?
I meant additional external grounding with a box such as this:Grounding on the OCK-2 between the three boards is carried out from board to board over the board connectors. LHY has taken care of correct grounding.
I meant additional external grounding with a box such as this:
https://quartzacoustic.com/shop/qa-premium-audio-ground-box-with-crocodile-clip-cable-included/https://quartzacoustic.com/shop/qa-premium-audio-ground-box-with-crocodile-clip-cable-included/
On the OCK-2 I recommend You to use 75 Ohm and GND setting on square wave outputs. Sine wave are less critical on impedance matching, so there You can set to 50 or 75 Ohm even if the outputs are 75 Ohm type. I personally would set those Sine wave outputs to ISO or GND if used with 50 Ohm cables/gears.Regarding the internal switching between 50/75Ω impedance for the OCK-2, would you change them to 75Ω if you using a 75Ω Cable? or would it be the device that determines the selection? As far as I know, typically a 10Mhz signal require 50Ω and word clock requires 75Ω.
In my case, my Silent Angel Switch has a 50Ω 10Mhz clock input but a physical 75Ω connector. It is connected to the OCK-2 which has a 50Ω connector. See how confusing this gets.
When asked about why, the manufacturers responded that they put the 75Ω connector so that both cables can be used. The implication of this response is that it is ok to use a 50Ω cable on a 75Ω connector, but not as acceptable vice versa.
Following up on that logic, I'm also using a 75Ω cable from the square wave 50Ω OCK-2 Clock (set to 50Ω/ISO internally) going into a 50Ω Gustard U18 DDC.On the OCK-2 I recommend You to use 75 Ohm and GND setting on square wave outputs. Sine wave are less criticalon impedance matching, so there You can set to 50 or 75 Ohm even if the outputs are 75 Ohm type. I personally would set those Sine wave outputs to ISO or GND if used with 50 Ohm cables/gears.
Edit: Always use the correct cable impedance.
/Jan
No. You should use 50 Ohm Sine wave output (GND or ISO) with a 50 Ohm BNC cable to the 50 Ohm input of the U18.Following up on that logic, I'm also using a 75Ω cable from the square wave 50Ω OCK-2 Clock (set to 50Ω/ISO internally) going into a 50Ω Gustard U18 DDC.
I should then set that switch on the OCK-2 to 75Ω/GND… to match the cable?
No, @JaMo gives correct answer. Just adding that:Following up on that logic, I'm also using a 75Ω cable from the square wave 50Ω OCK-2 Clock (set to 50Ω/ISO internally) going into a 50Ω Gustard U18 DDC.
I should then set that switch on the OCK-2 to 75Ω/GND… to match the cable?
Proper and technically correct settings aside, my high dollar 75Ω cable sounds much better than my lowly 50Ω Cable. Thus, the line of questioning. I know I need a real 50Ω cable, but it's gonna cost me some if I go Shunyata/Sotm 50Ω. Might have to actually shake the 50Ω LMR400 tree and see how it compares to the 75Ω Audience Studio One. If anything, I can share that experience for the sake of this thread's collective experience.No. You should use 50 Ohm Sine wave output (GND or ISO) with a 50 Ohm BNC cable to the 50 Ohm input of the U18.
It is the "listener device" impedance that is relevant to be loyal to. The U18 is a device with a pretty exact 50 Ohm impedance and should be fed with a good 50 Ohm BNC cable and the sending device (Master clock, here LHY OCK-2) should be set to 50 Ohm (sine, ISO/GND)
Very clear and much appreciated hierarchical decision tree.No, @JaMo gives correct answer. Just adding that:
1st order: Always match cable impedance with termination on the receiver.
2nd order: match sender termination with #1. Almost equally important.
3rd order: match connectors impedance (least important).
Independent to the impedance setting. ISO means "isolated", it gives isolation for DC (including mains 50/60Hz and low frequency harmonics). This is setting for protecting from ground loops. GND position gives a direct ground connection with the receiver.The ISO/GND setting as it relates to 50/75Ω cable/termination/wave options are still a bit mystifying.