003
Headphoneus Supremus
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2005
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I am in the middle of recabling my turntable RIGHT NOW as I speak, the iron is already hot and I can not move forward until this question is answered.... This is a very simple question that anybody in the DIY forum should know, though so I am faithful I will get the answer relatively quickly.
So here it is. I am recabling my turntable, with both a new power cord, new ground wire and new RCA cables (that you hook up to the phono stage).
About the RCA cables. Note I am not talking about the thin tonearm wires. The RCA cables that were in the turntable stock were divided up into two wires, left and right, of course. If you cut one of these wires open, you were greeted with a whole ton of thin silver wires, I assume the shielding. When you cut through that, you were greeted with a smallish insulated (with rubber) wire in the very center. If you cut through this one you are greeted with more thin silver wires, the signal wires.
If you carefully cut off the plastic around the RCA plug, and looked where each of these two wires was connected, you will see that the center wire was soldered to the conductive RCA pin and the lots of thin silver wires (the shielding) was twisted into a single wire and soldered to the outside ring of the RCA plug, I assume the ground.
Now that you know what the stock RCA cables are like, let me explain the ones I am replacing it with. I am replacing it with a 3ft Acoustic Research performance series stereo interconnect, which I am GUESSING is shielded AND grounded, where as the stock turntable cables use an external ground wire. That is what I would like to do here as well, but inside the AR cable, are 3 wires. I know which one is the signal, but I do not know which one is the ground and which is the shielding. I need the shielding, as I will not be using the ground. For reference, here is a link to the AR cables:
http://www.amazon.com/Acoustic-Resea.../dp/B00008VSI7
So inside the AR cable, from outside to in, is a layer of what looks like rubber and layer of mylar shielding after that. Inside the mylar shielding is where everything important is. There is a thin red wire, a thin white wire and a bunch of thin silver wires without any insulation, but it is not wrapped around anything like in the stock cables, they are all in a group. And in between all these things is what looks like cotton, not sure for what. All I know is that the red wire is the signal wire. If we look at how these 3 wires are soldered to the RCA plug, I found that the red wire was the signal wire (already knew that), and the white wire and the non-insulated silver wires combine and are soldered to the outside circle of the RCA plug, which is the ground I think. [size=small]Anyway, what I need to know is, when replace the stock cables, do I substitute it's wrapped around silver wires with the white cable, or the non-insulated cable (many smaller cables in a group)?[/size]
Also, one final quick question about replacing the power cable. I want to replace it with a polarized one, because the stock one is not polarized. The stock power cable is soldered to two solder spots (one for each prong), and then there is another cable soldered to each solder spot as well, these go into the motor to power it. One of these cables is red and one is white. [size=small]Do I solder the polarized side (with the bigger prong) of the new cable to the solder spot with the red cable or the white one?[/size]
Thanks for the help! I need the answers as quick as possible because as I said I'm doing this right now!
So here it is. I am recabling my turntable, with both a new power cord, new ground wire and new RCA cables (that you hook up to the phono stage).
About the RCA cables. Note I am not talking about the thin tonearm wires. The RCA cables that were in the turntable stock were divided up into two wires, left and right, of course. If you cut one of these wires open, you were greeted with a whole ton of thin silver wires, I assume the shielding. When you cut through that, you were greeted with a smallish insulated (with rubber) wire in the very center. If you cut through this one you are greeted with more thin silver wires, the signal wires.
If you carefully cut off the plastic around the RCA plug, and looked where each of these two wires was connected, you will see that the center wire was soldered to the conductive RCA pin and the lots of thin silver wires (the shielding) was twisted into a single wire and soldered to the outside ring of the RCA plug, I assume the ground.
Now that you know what the stock RCA cables are like, let me explain the ones I am replacing it with. I am replacing it with a 3ft Acoustic Research performance series stereo interconnect, which I am GUESSING is shielded AND grounded, where as the stock turntable cables use an external ground wire. That is what I would like to do here as well, but inside the AR cable, are 3 wires. I know which one is the signal, but I do not know which one is the ground and which is the shielding. I need the shielding, as I will not be using the ground. For reference, here is a link to the AR cables:
http://www.amazon.com/Acoustic-Resea.../dp/B00008VSI7
So inside the AR cable, from outside to in, is a layer of what looks like rubber and layer of mylar shielding after that. Inside the mylar shielding is where everything important is. There is a thin red wire, a thin white wire and a bunch of thin silver wires without any insulation, but it is not wrapped around anything like in the stock cables, they are all in a group. And in between all these things is what looks like cotton, not sure for what. All I know is that the red wire is the signal wire. If we look at how these 3 wires are soldered to the RCA plug, I found that the red wire was the signal wire (already knew that), and the white wire and the non-insulated silver wires combine and are soldered to the outside circle of the RCA plug, which is the ground I think. [size=small]Anyway, what I need to know is, when replace the stock cables, do I substitute it's wrapped around silver wires with the white cable, or the non-insulated cable (many smaller cables in a group)?[/size]
Also, one final quick question about replacing the power cable. I want to replace it with a polarized one, because the stock one is not polarized. The stock power cable is soldered to two solder spots (one for each prong), and then there is another cable soldered to each solder spot as well, these go into the motor to power it. One of these cables is red and one is white. [size=small]Do I solder the polarized side (with the bigger prong) of the new cable to the solder spot with the red cable or the white one?[/size]
Thanks for the help! I need the answers as quick as possible because as I said I'm doing this right now!