![]() |
|
Source of 3.5mm gold plated audio connectors ?
Hi,
I'm on the lookout for gold plated mono and stereo audio connectors in the popular 3.5mm diam. fitting. I've noted that the tin plated variety are noisy when used for microphone input purposes. They're common enough on the small head- & earphones, microphones etc. that come with audio gear. What I'm after is the bare connector so that I can make up my own leads. RS Components do some at around £5+ each which seems high when complete earphones (with gold plated plug) can be bought for £9. (And XLR types would weigh as much as my MiniDisc recorder!) Any ideas before I go down the cannibalise route? Thanks -- M Stewart Milton Keynes, UK http://www.megalith.freeserve.co.uk\oddimage.htm |
Source of 3.5mm gold plated audio connectors ?
Malcolm Stewart wrote:
Hi, I'm on the lookout for gold plated mono and stereo audio connectors in the popular 3.5mm diam. fitting. I've noted that the tin plated variety are noisy when used for microphone input purposes. They're common enough on the small head- & earphones, microphones etc. that come with audio gear. What I'm after is the bare connector so that I can make up my own leads. RS Components do some at around £5+ each which seems high when complete earphones (with gold plated plug) can be bought for £9. (And XLR types would weigh as much as my MiniDisc recorder!) Any ideas before I go down the cannibalise route? Thanks http://custom1.farnell.com/cpc/ -- Andy Hewitt ** FAF#1, (Ex-OSOS#5) - FJ1200 ABS Honda Civic 16v: Windows free zone (Mac G5 Dual Processor) http://www.thehewitts.plus.com - now online |
Source of 3.5mm gold plated audio connectors ?
Malcolm Stewart wrote:
Hi, I'm on the lookout for gold plated mono and stereo audio connectors in the popular 3.5mm diam. fitting. I've noted that the tin plated variety are noisy when used for microphone input purposes. They're common enough on the small head- & earphones, microphones etc. that come with audio gear. What I'm after is the bare connector so that I can make up my own leads. RS Components do some at around £5+ each which seems high when complete earphones (with gold plated plug) can be bought for £9. (And XLR types would weigh as much as my MiniDisc recorder!) Any ideas before I go down the cannibalise route? Rapid electronics part number 20-0066 are very high quality and only £0.55 (less in bulk). The catalog is on their website as pdf. If you file away the end they accept cables up to 1cm, which I find handly because I can wire them straight to thickish coax and phono plugs without adaptors. |
Source of 3.5mm gold plated audio connectors ?
In article ,
Malcolm Stewart wrote: RS Components do some at around £5+ each which seems high when complete earphones (with gold plated plug) can be bought for £9. That's because RS ones are gold plated rather than gold coloured. -- *The most common name in the world is Mohammed * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Source of 3.5mm gold plated audio connectors ?
"Andy Hewitt" wrote in message
... Malcolm Stewart wrote: Any ideas before I go down the cannibalise route? http://custom1.farnell.com/cpc/ Andy Hewitt ** FAF#1, (Ex-OSOS#5) - FJ1200 ABS Just what I was looking for. Thanks -- M Stewart Milton Keynes, UK |
Source of 3.5mm gold plated audio connectors ?
Malcolm Stewart wrote:
"Andy Hewitt" wrote in message ... Malcolm Stewart wrote: Any ideas before I go down the cannibalise route? http://custom1.farnell.com/cpc/ Andy Hewitt ** FAF#1, (Ex-OSOS#5) - FJ1200 ABS Just what I was looking for. Thanks No worries, I buy lots from them, you have to check prices though, they aren't always cheapest, but their service is superb. -- Andy Hewitt ** FAF#1, (Ex-OSOS#5) - FJ1200 ABS Honda Civic 16v: Windows free zone (Mac G5 Dual Processor) http://www.thehewitts.plus.com - now online |
Source of 3.5mm gold plated audio connectors ?
"Malcolm Stewart" wrote in message ... Hi, I'm on the lookout for gold plated mono and stereo audio connectors in the popular 3.5mm diam. fitting. Any ideas before I go down the cannibalise route? http://www.techlink.uk.com |
Source of 3.5mm gold plated audio connectors ?
Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
RS Components do some at around £5+ each which seems high when complete earphones (with gold plated plug) can be bought for £9. That's because RS ones are gold plated rather than gold coloured. Are you saying that CPC's 65p ones aren't gold plated, in spite of being described so on their web site? -- Wally www.artbywally.com www.wally.myby.co.uk |
Source of 3.5mm gold plated audio connectors ?
Malcolm Stewart wrote: Hi, I'm on the lookout for gold plated mono and stereo audio connectors in the popular 3.5mm diam. fitting. I've noted that the tin plated variety are noisy when used for microphone input purposes. They're common enough on the small head- & earphones, microphones etc. that come with audio gear. What I'm after is the bare connector so that I can make up my own leads. RS Components do some at around £5+ each which seems high when complete earphones (with gold plated plug) can be bought for £9. (And XLR types would weigh as much as my MiniDisc recorder!) Any ideas before I go down the cannibalise route? Use a better connector than 3.5mm. There are basic limitations with the 3.5mm connector - not least those of contact area and contact pressure which is probably where all the noise issues come from. Nickel is actually quite a good connector material ( I doubt you're actually looking at tin - that's normally reserved for permanent interconnections ). Replacing it with gold doesn't address the basic problems of the connector. The quantity manufacturers get gold plated stuff to look good mainly. It costs little in practice. A connector specialist once referred to the process as 'waving the connector around in some gold fumes for a second or two' - lol. Do you *have* to use 3.5mm ? Graham |
Source of 3.5mm gold plated audio connectors ?
"Pooh Bear" wrote in message
... Use a better connector than 3.5mm. There are basic limitations with the 3.5mm connector - not least those of contact area and contact pressure which is probably where all the noise issues come from. Nickel is actually quite a good connector material ( I doubt you're actually looking at tin - that's normally reserved for permanent interconnections ). Replacing it with gold doesn't address the basic problems of the connector. The quantity manufacturers get gold plated stuff to look good mainly. It costs little in practice. A connector specialist once referred to the process as 'waving the connector around in some gold fumes for a second or two' - lol. Do you *have* to use 3.5mm ? Graham Thanks for the info. 3.5mm is what is on the input of my MiniDisc recorder. My comparisons are based on what my ears tell me. If I extend the microphone cable using stereo leads with gold plated jacks (as supplied by Sony on their Fontopia & W.ear phones, there is minimal noise when the connection is made, and rotating the plug is a "quiet" operation. Not so with the tin or nickel plated varieties which seem to tarnish quite rapidly, and produce quite noticeable noise until rotating plug in socket has scraped it clean again. As stated in my original post, I\'m aware of XLR connectors etc. but am trying to keep size down in this instance. -- M Stewart Milton Keynes, UK http://www.megalith.freeserve.co.uk/oddimage.htm |
All times are GMT. The time now is 11:53 AM. |
|
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0
Copyright ©2004-2006 AudioBanter.co.uk