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Gear / Technical Help => Ask The Tapers => Topic started by: Gr8ful98 on October 30, 2008, 12:45:00 PM

Title: What is an active cable?
Post by: Gr8ful98 on October 30, 2008, 12:45:00 PM
I've been looking around the site & see where folks are buying or selling or using "active mic cables"
but don't see exactly what they are or what they are used for?

For some reason I feel like I need to own a pair...but I wouldn't know what to do with 'em.

Title: Re: What is an active cable?
Post by: J.Maye on October 30, 2008, 12:59:51 PM
No actives are avaialble for 480's or Sp C4's.

It just allows you to go cap>cable>mic body so you can have just the caps on a stand/in hat and have a smaller footprint on the stand.   
Title: Re: What is an active cable?
Post by: Gr8ful98 on October 30, 2008, 01:04:14 PM
Ah...thanks bro.  Now off to window shopping at the yard sale.
Title: Re: What is an active cable?
Post by: DSatz on October 30, 2008, 11:09:27 PM
"Active" cables have active circuitry in them--in the original (Schoeps), a low-noise field effect transistor (FET) and associated parts are in the head (capsule) end of the cable, so that the signal in the cable is run at low impedance. This makes the arrangement far less susceptible to interference and losses than in the older type of passive capsule extensions which could never be more than a foot or two long before stray capacitance and RFI became a problem.

Since the original active cable arrangement was patented in the mid-1970s, during the lifetime of that patent all the other manufacturers had to come up with distinctly different arrangements. For example, Neumann's capsule extensions aren't "active"--their capsules are. But most people here don't seem to care about the difference since the effect is more or less the same--either way, you can separate the capsule from the amplifier and use a cable in between.

--best regards