ARCHIVED FORUM -- March 2012 to February 2022READ ONLY FORUM
This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022
I'm actually repairing an old DIN cable and a question just pop off my mind: When I got my 8000 system, only one cable was usable: it was the TP1 (factory original, with a B&O sticker identifying it). I always used it to connect the Beogram 8000 to the Beomaster. (Never had the original Phono cable, and I never use the Beocord anyway)
Though I don't have any problem with it and the sound was, and still is great (at least from what I always perceived), I wondered if that "TP1" cable came with a chassis ground, isolated from the common ground. (a silver wire wrapping around a bronze wire wrapping) Or does it really matters?
But since B&O identified these cables in the 1st place, perhaps it does matter?
Thanks
Guillaume
It DOES matter.But maybe you just got lucky or maybe the last production cables were made universal - it would work.
The main difference between the original TP and PH cables is the double shielding and the fact that the TP cable is wiredboth ways (record and playback), where the PH cable is playback only.
Martin
Note the different ground symbols in the schematics.The signal ground (pin 2 in the DIN socket) has a solid black ground symbol. That's the ground reference for the audio signals.The protective ground (the metal shield of the DIN socket) has an earth symbol. That's the chassis ground = the metal of the record playerand the amplifier = the earth connection if a three-prong mains plug is used.
Both grounds MUST be carried through from the record player to the amplifier and they MUST be kept separate.Typically (but not always) somewhere in the amplifier, there is a small capacitive coupling between the two and that's how it should be.
I'm sure, that Steve at Soundsheavenly can make a good and correct cable.