drtat
drtat's picture
Offline
Last seen: Never ago
Joined: Oct 24 2007 - 7:12pm
Will a 4 conductor plug work in a 3 conductor output?
Jan Vigne
Jan Vigne's picture
Offline
Last seen: Never ago
Joined: Mar 18 2006 - 12:57pm

What sort of four conductor plug is this? I've never seen a four conductor 1/4" plug as most headphones use.

Jeff Wong
Jeff Wong's picture
Offline
Last seen: 13 years 3 weeks ago
Joined: Sep 6 2005 - 3:28am

I've seen 4 conductor plugs on CB radio microphones, but, not headphones. I wonder if the reference is actually to the "+" and "-" from the L and R channel of the headphones. On the tip/ring/sleeve 1/4" plug (the 3 conductor reference?), the L and R "-" leads will typically be soldered to the sleeve (ground), the R to the ring, and the L to the tip.

drtat
drtat's picture
Offline
Last seen: Never ago
Joined: Oct 24 2007 - 7:12pm

well, this is their text"Built on the same features as the SR60, but utilizes a 4 conductor connecting cable..." so...would it work? or is it just fancy confusing language?

bobedaone
bobedaone's picture
Offline
Last seen: 10 years 2 months ago
Joined: Feb 1 2007 - 12:27am

I think in this case that Grado is referring to the wire, not the plug. A "four-conductor connecting cable" probably just means that the cable has an extra wire, and thus a higher total gauge. That's my guess.

Elk
Elk's picture
Offline
Last seen: 3 years 7 months ago
Joined: Dec 26 2006 - 6:32am

Many headphones are wired so that the left and right channel shares the same ground wire. This isn't the best however and an improvement can be realized by giving each channel its own path. I bet this is what the text is describing.

drtat
drtat's picture
Offline
Last seen: Never ago
Joined: Oct 24 2007 - 7:12pm

thanks

Log in or register to post comments
-->
  • X