Guitar cables (mojo alert)
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- euan
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I usually get it so both the connects stop at the 9 and 3 o'clock positions of the coil and then put it through the otherside to keep it together. Works for me. On the last large batch of XLR cables I made for Subcity all the cables had velcro ties sown onto them so you no longer need cable ties.
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euan
- mewithoutus
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i look for this as well. the ends are just gonna get stressed, it happens. if you can unscrew them and resolder, then the cable will last a long time.Mike wrote:
1. Can I repair it? i.e. are the jacks unscrewable
i use a kore one bullet cable. its a white coil cable. its super heavy duty, looks snazzy (well, i think so) and theres no signal loss. sounds nice and clean. well, it doesnt sound like anything, which is the point. ive had it for over a year now with no issues.
rich people say fuck yeah hey hey
heavium wrote:grow a bat army in my room and train them to attack when someone comes in
Oh yeah, where you just snap them together!euan wrote:I usually get it so both the connects stop at the 9 and 3 o'clock positions of the coil and then put it through the otherside to keep it together. Works for me. On the last large batch of XLR cables I made for Subcity all the cables had velcro ties sown onto them so you no longer need cable ties.
I wish they would just maek guitars use XLR so we could do that with guitar shit too. lol.
If I had any money, I would definitely go out and get lots of velcro for my cables, that junk's INVALUBLE.
I've been wanting a good coiled guitar cord for sooooo long!mewithoutus wrote: i use a kore one bullet cable. its a white coil cable. its super heavy duty, looks snazzy (well, i think so) and theres no signal loss. sounds nice and clean. well, it doesnt sound like anything, which is the point. ive had it for over a year now with no issues.
I had 4 of those Fender California Coils waaaay back in like 2000 or something (came in blue and red), but they all got lost/fucked up. They were only like 3.99 or some shit. Really cheap quality.
Dude, do you has LANK for this cable?
{ EDIT: fond the cables!!! http://www.musiciansfriend.com/navigation?q=coiled&st= / http://www.musiciansfriend.com/product/ ... u=330241[b]}[/b]
Last edited by Sloan on Thu Apr 24, 2008 12:09 am, edited 2 times in total.
Haha, on a quest for coiled cables, I found this on the WHIRLWIND site:
Keys for Guitar Cords That Sound Best & Survive
1) Braided Copper Shield.
Foil shields are significantly stiffer, making them annoying to performers connected to them and they deteriorate with constant flexing, making them fine for the studio or in a snake, but a time bomb for the guitarist on stage. Shields which are simply spiral wrapped will "spread" when you flex the cable, providing openings for those nasty outside sounds to jump into the guitar signal. The braid is a key issue.
2) Conductive Inner Wrap.
A conductive inner wrap under the shield will increase shielding and also reduce microphonics. This can be harder to spot, but becomes obvious when you smack the cable around. Some cables make a lot of noise when they get tapped. Good ones don't.
3) Low Capacitance.
This will matter with some guitar/pickup/amp combinations, and not with others. If your guitars all have onboard electronics, it shouldn't be an issue. For some of the classics, it's a big deal. So you don't have to think about it, lower capacitance is better. Try to stay under 50pf a foot if you can get the specs on the cable.
4) Strain Relief
A flexible molded boot protecting the last few inches of the cord before it enters the plug. This is a life-expectancy issue. Most cord fatigue takes place at the point where the nice flexible cable enters the hard inflexible plug.
Whirlwind uses a molded boot that tapers down onto the cord to progressively damp the flex. Lots of people use heat shrink, but it's stiffer. Some people don't use anything. When we (at Whirlwind) started using this type of boot on our Leader® cables, field failures (which were low) dropped a non-subtle 85%.
5) Multiple Copper Stranding
Look for multiple fine copper strands for the inner conductor. These give you flexibility while keeping resistance low. Esoteric audio people may tell you the extra surface area created by fine stranding also helps high frequencies due to "skin effect". They'll probably add that you should use oxygen free" copper for a better sound (actually, "oxygen free" really means "less oxygen", with different OF cables giving you different amounts of Oxygen Freeness). These intriguing possibilities aside, more fine strands for a given inner conductor gauge translates to more suppleness and greater life expectancy on stage.
I was considering making this thread myself. Today I got a couple of cables in the post, van damme cable and neutrix connectors. Absolutely brilliant quality and two 3m cables cost me £14 after postage. It was from an ebay store who buy the cable and connectors wholesale, make them up and sell them on. I really hate cheap cables, and I also hate £80 Monster type cables with all the marketing mojo. The ones I just got were a great price, and I'll get a couple more soon I think. I expect them to last for as long as I'm willing to look after them. I'll get an ebay shop link if anyone is interested.
Shabba.
Nice one! I got to para 4 before checking the date of the article.benwalker wrote:I'm waiting on the 1/4" version of >>these<< babies...
I used to do this. Now I just have a huge bag of zip ties and I zip tie the shit. (only for my PA cables) All my guitar cables get coiled, velcro'd and set inside my pedal board for safe keeping between uses.Mike wrote:I use the gentle 'knot' approach also. I fold the cable in half several times and just do a gentle knot. In 10 years I've had no issues.
They say great minds think alike....Sometimes we do too...
Ah, jeez. Golden ears... Guitar Player cable review
- mewithoutus
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Midrange zing and abundant low end. Where's the treble? You needz those hollow treble conductors. Possibly filled with denatured H2Oeuan wrote:Klotz LaGrange
With its midrange zing and abundant low-end, the LaGrange is a muscular-sounding cable that melds clarity and string-to-string detail with an impressive punch.
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