Well RO,
while I was cruising the web tonight, in addition to cringing at the piracy thread, I came across three different kinds of Blue microphone cables, which ironically are also red and green. I was just curious as to what the difference is, since I need to spend some Christmas money burning a hole in my pocket.
Comments
Look at the specs for capacitance values. This cable is itself
Look at the specs for capacitance values. This cable is itself acts as an RC filter (low pass filter) the higher the cap value the more slewing of the audio signal.
The resistence value of cable is often linked to the AWG and stranding.
But as Greener says, in this case it won't matter much. Unless of course your an audiofile who can hear a single electron.
Codemonkey wrote: Space, why buy different coloured cables? Then
Codemonkey wrote: Space, why buy different coloured cables? Then any idiot can tell what is what. Get yourself a pair of ultravision goggles and get different shades of black.
Really though I use coloured electrical tape on the connectors.
As well. On the many shades of black and especially on the midi cables going into the midi patchbay to and from multiple boxes, I had to make a schematic of the color coded tape.
And that is why I had to get color coded cables :)
They are different weights and types of wire. If you can tell th
They are different weights and types of wire. If you can tell the difference you're doing well. :P
Some of the BS Blue writes about the cables is classic. :P
Kiwi - Or green.
These distinctive microphone cables are built to Blue's rigid specifications and offer the recordist and performer a signal path of outstanding sonic quality and high durability. Although recommended for the entire award-winning Blue microphone line, these cables will enlighten the performance of any studio or live performance microphone.
The Kiwi cable is a star-quad design, using a quartet of 22awg inner cores, connected in opposite pairs to effect a much better level of electromagnetic interference rejection - especially from nearby sources. The overall screen is the familiar 95 percent coverage tinned-copper braid, and gold plated XLRs are once again used to terminate the cable.
Cranberry - or red
20-AWG cable that highlights the rich lows and silky presence of the mic - extended low and high frequency response. Recommended for use with the Dragonfly and Mouse mics.
And the Blueberry- Yes, it's blue.
22-AWG high-fidelity cable highlights the neutral presence of a mic, with an extended high end frequency response. Recommended for use with the Ball, 8-Ball, Baby Bottle, Bluebird and Blueberry mics.