Audio Cables
Signal flow starts and ends with a length of copper and a pair of connectors. Choose the wrong link in that chain, and flawless sound soon develops hums, crackles, or drop-outs. This section gathers a full selection of audio cables, from short studio patch leads to heavy-duty tour looms, covering balanced, unbalanced, and high-current runs. Every lead listed is built for dependable performance, no matter the setting.
Core Cable Families
Various tasks demand different construction methods. Five groups cover nearly every requirement in modern audio work:
XLR Cables
Three-pin balanced leads that reject interference across distance. Common on mixing consoles, stage boxes, pre-amps, and, of course, the average microphone cable.
Speaker Cable
Thick conductors carry amplified current from power stages to a loudspeaker. Low resistance and flexible jackets stop energy loss and allow tight bending without fatigue.
Speakon Cables
Speaker leads fitted with twist-lock NL connectors. The design prevents accidental pull-out and guards the contacts from arcing when hot-swapping on busy stages.
Audio Signal Cables
A catch-all term for patch leads, instrument lines, and inter-connects. These handle line-level signals between outboard, recorders, synthesisers, and more.
Bulk and Installation Rolls
Un-terminated cable supplied on drums or coils for bespoke wiring jobs. Cut to length, solder or crimp the preferred plugs, and finish off with heat-shrink for a tidy loom.
How Construction Affects Sound
Copper purity, conductor gauge, shielding style, and insulation materials influence audible results far more than plug plating or fashion claims. A brief rundown follows:
- Gauge - Low-level runs rely on small cores, yet speaker runs need chunky copper to carry current. A mismatch leads to voltage drop or unwanted noise.
- Shielding - Foil, braided, or served shields wrap around the inner conductors, blocking radio-frequency rubbish and transformer buzz.
- Capacitance - Longer runs build capacitance, softening top-end detail. Balanced paths help, though keeping lengths sensible matters just as much.
- Outer jacket - PVC remains common, but rugged TPE jackets stay flexible during sub-zero night load-outs. A supple jacket also coils neatly, saving time between shows.
Balanced or Unbalanced?
Balanced lines transmit the wanted audio as a pair of identical waveforms, one inverted. When interference creeps in, it appears equally on both legs and cancels out at the destination. Unbalanced paths run a single hot conductor and a ground return, leaving nothing to remove the rubbish picked up along the way. The rule is simple: balanced lines for anything travelling more than a couple of metres or sitting near lighting dimmers, unbalanced only when unavoidable.
Typical Balanced Paths
- Desk outputs feeding powered loudspeaker inputs via XLR cables
- Stage box tails returning to a front-of-house console
- Outboard sends and returns on TRS patch bays in control rooms
Typical Unbalanced Paths
- Electric guitar into a pedal board over a short TS lead
- Turntables linking to DJ mixers on RCA leads
- Hi-fi separates connected inside a rack with half-metre patch leads
Connector Round-Up
Connector choice is dictated by both the source hardware and the target hardware. A quick reference:
- XLR - Three pins, locking latch, balanced, pin-2 hot convention in the UK.
- Speakon - Two, four, or eight contact versions; keyed twist-lock nose; live disconnection prevented by design.
- TRS / TS jack - Quarter-inch or 3.5 mm. TRS supports balanced or stereo; TS stays unbalanced mono.
- RCA (Phono) - Consumer standard. Small, simple, but no strain relief, so best left static.
Stage, Studio, and Fixed Installations
Each working environment sets its own rules for cable handling:
- Touring stages - Daily load-ins demand roadworthy connectors and abrasion-resistant jackets. Speakon cables dominate speaker lines, while colour-coded XLR cables aid speedy line-checks.
- Recording rooms - Neat looms snake through trunking; low-capacitance audio signal cables preserve top-end sparkle during overdubs. Balanced patch bays streamline routing without hiss.
- Commercial AV installs - Cable trays hide long runs through walls and ceilings. Plenum-rated outer jackets meet fire codes, and installer-friendly cores accept punch-down terminals.
Choosing an Ideal Length
The instinct to buy the longest option often backfires. Slack leads clutter floors, snag, and introduce extra capacitance. A tape measure and a quick sketch of the layout solves the problem before checkout. When the run truly is long, opt for thicker conductors or active extension boxes rather than joining multiple short leads.
Durability and Routine Care
- Coil leads in the "over-under" pattern; kinks vanish and the inner cores remain relaxed.
- Label both ends with coloured rings or heat-shrink; faster changeovers, less confusion.
- Avoid tight cable ties. Soft hook-and-loop straps secure bundles without crushing insulation.
- Store in dry flight trunks; moisture corrodes contacts and wicks up the braid in damp venues.
- Test continuity every few months - fault-finding mid-gig wastes valuable showtime.
Bulk Cable and Custom Looms
When an off-the-shelf option is the wrong length or the venue demands unusual terminations, bulk rolls solve the issue. Purchase by the metre, pick matching connectors, assemble, then label. Larger projects - conference suites, rehearsal rooms, or mobile rigs - often benefit from loom builds: multiple channels bound inside a single outer sleeve that drops set-up time dramatically.
Selection Checklist
Before placing an order, confirm:
- Connector type matches both ends exactly.
- Length fits with a small safety margin, not a coil of slack.
- Balanced or unbalanced status suits the signal being carried.
- Conductor size is adequate for high-current loudspeaker feeds.
- Outer jacket compound resists the likely physical and climatic stress.