Originally posted by potatofarmer
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Is String Grounding Necessary?
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Originally posted by John Kolbeck View PostYou'd think a company like Fender, that produces at least one product somewhere along the entire signal chain, could introduce something like a balanced guitar rig more readily than anyone else, and exploit the selling point.
Can you imagine the size and expense of a pedal board where all the effects have balanced ins & outs? All to no good effect really, just makes everything bigger and raises the price a lot. I'm sure there are some people for whom that would be an attraction.This isn't the future I signed up for.
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Originally posted by salvarsan View PostI wish, but no, it was across the bay from Tokyo in the Port of Chiba where ...
the sky above the port was the color of television, tuned to a dead channel.
FWIW I´d be interested in an aftermarket pancreasJuan Manuel Fahey
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Originally posted by Mike Sulzer View PostThere is a way around this, in principle, although I have not tried it. It involves using a stereo jack for the guitar and amp and two conductor shielded cable. You then have two signal leads, call them high and low. The high signal is what it is, and it goes to the tip. The low signal is what people usually call ground, but you have to make sure that no actual shield is connected to it, and it goes to the ring. So all the copper foil, pot cases, etc. connect to the shield of the cable and at the other end it goes to the chassis of the amp. The low side of the signal runs directly to the bottom of the cathode biasing resistor of the first stage. (Yes, that point is at "ground" potential, but it is signal ground rather than chassis ground, and they can be a bit different.)
Say you harness a guitar as outlined, but do not modify the amplifier.
Build an instrument cable with TRS on one end, TS on the other (SIG- and SHD tied together).
Plug the TRS end into the guitar, TS end into the amp.
Would (might) this configuration offer some advantage over using a mono cable?
If the answer is "it depends", what are the considerations?
-rb
EDIT:
My guess is that hum induced in the cable and guitar shields would be largely eliminated from the signal, but hum induced on the amp chassis would remain.DON'T FEED THE TROLLS!
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Originally posted by J M Fahey View PostPlease tell us the truth, the guitar hum was just an excuse, you were shopping for illegal synthetic body parts
Fortified wines from Portugal are named accordingly -- port. Inside Texas, a port is only a fortified wine when export sales are involved. Sometimes, a port-style vinified in Texas or 'Tejas' is euphemistically called "portejas" and seldom leaves the state.
Enoch's Stomp's first harvest was Texas Black Spanish or Lenoir grapes, known to thrive despite threat of Pierce's Disease in the weather extremes of East Texas. The Lenoir must, they fermented, fortified, and aged in barrel for 4 years. It waited another 4 years in bottles labeled "Dark Portejas". Upon release, it won double gold and Grand Star at the 2015 Lone Star International. Competing well in the $$$ category, it is inexplicably underpriced at $40/btl.
Dark Portejas, a rare and fine thing, is available only over the winery's tasting room counter.
When I finally arrived at Enoch's for a tasting, the day was dusk, warm, and wet. Electing to enjoy the weather on the patio, I carried the Portejas snifter outside, sank into a chair beneath an umbrella. I filled my head with the wine's cloyed cedar-and-oak aroma and reflected on the weather.
A dark sky met the darker horizon while outdoor lights obliquely lit the gentle rain to give the air a chrome-and-black speckle like monochrome video noise. On a whim, I lifted my snifter to eye level and brought the dark wine meniscus even with the black horizon.
The sky above the port was the color of television, tuned to a dead channel."Det var helt Texas" is written Nowegian meaning "that's totally Texas." When spoken, it means "that's crazy."
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Originally posted by rjb View PostQuestion:
Say you harness a guitar as outlined, but do not modify the amplifier.
Build an instrument cable with TRS on one end, TS on the other (SIG- and SHD tied together).
Plug the TRS end into the guitar, TS end into the amp.
Would (might) this configuration offer some advantage over using a mono cable?
If the answer is "it depends", what are the considerations?
-rb
EDIT:
My guess is that hum induced on the cable shield would be largely eliminated from the signal, but hum induced on the amp chassis would remain.
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Originally posted by Richard View PostYou can just connect the shield at the amp end provided you have 2 conductor cable.... I swapped ends and didn't notice a difference.
I assumed it obvious that a TRS to TS cable would use 2 conductor shielded cable.
The guitar's innards would be wired as Mike outlined.
The cable connections would be:
Guitar End
T - SIG+
R - SIG-
S - SHD
Amp End
T - SIG+
S - SIG- and GND
If you swapped cable ends, you would tie SIG- to SHD at the guitar's TRS jack, defeating the separation of "signal ground" from shield.
If you used a two-conductor TRS-to-TRS cable and plugged it into an unmodified amp, SIG- from the guitar would float at the amp's mono input jack.
Again, I'm not sure what you're saying.
Did you wire the guitar with a TRS jack (as Mike outlined), connect the guitar to an unmodified amp with a TRS-TS cable, and find no difference when you swapped cable ends?
I'm not questioning your observation- just confirming we're on the same page.
Thanks,
-rbLast edited by rjb; 09-02-2016, 01:51 AM.DON'T FEED THE TROLLS!
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Originally posted by rjb View PostIt appears this forum needs a new category: "Writer's Colony".
The "Lyttony" in the title should have clued you to its aggressive competition in bad writing, i.e., the Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest in which contestants compete against the original "it was a dark and stormy night . . ."
So, if there's a writing category, it should explicitly be "Bad Writing".
You mooks, fix the damn guitar ground awreddy. That horse is dead and rotting."Det var helt Texas" is written Nowegian meaning "that's totally Texas." When spoken, it means "that's crazy."
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Originally posted by J M Fahey View PostIs that yours?
Enoch's Stomp Dark Portejas is real, good enough that you shouldn't leave the bottle unattended among company. (*sigh!*)"Det var helt Texas" is written Nowegian meaning "that's totally Texas." When spoken, it means "that's crazy."
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Originally posted by salvarsan View PostYou mooks, fix the damn guitar ground awreddy. That horse is dead and rotting.
Seriously, as a concrete-skulled ignoramus, I can sometimes benefit from being told "Don't waste your time trying that. It won't work because yadda, yadda, yadda."
-rbDON'T FEED THE TROLLS!
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A good reference is Ralph Morrison's laconic 146 page "Grounding and Shielding Techniques in Instrumentation, Second Edition", published 1977, ISBN-13: 978-0471029922.
It's practical physics written for electrical engineering types. Used hardcover copies are about $5 shipped but later editions are stupid money expensive."Det var helt Texas" is written Nowegian meaning "that's totally Texas." When spoken, it means "that's crazy."
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Originally posted by salvarsan View PostA good reference is Ralph Morrison's laconic 146 page "Grounding and Shielding Techniques in Instrumentation, Second Edition"
Maybe I'll warm up with this.
(Haven't read it in a few years. Maybe more will sink in this time).
It's only 12 pages, and even has a cartoon illustration.
http://www.rane.com/pdf/ranenotes/Gr...io_Devices.pdf
-rbDON'T FEED THE TROLLS!
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I had google "why does the bridge have to be grounded?", and I got a different answer for every guitar forum that came up in the results, and yet I bet that book has the single, correct answer somewhere within its pages. It's funny that in the age of the Internet and self-publishing, quality information is suddenly so hard to find, while wild guesses aplenty are at our fingertips. It's like The Great Dumbening is upon us.
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