help with replacing banana plugs
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- Captain Sousie
- 4 valves
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help with replacing banana plugs
I just replaced a set of banana plugs on a 14ga speaker cable. The original plugs were a fixed, connected pair that didn't fit the layout on my reciever. The new plugs are the GLS Black Chromes. The problem is this, when I replaced the plug the new one feels a little loose in the sleeves. The screw is snug in the insulation but the wire wiggles in the sleeve. Is this a bad thing or normal? If this is not normal, how do I fix it?
Thanks,
Sou
Thanks,
Sou
I am not Mr. Holland, and you are not my opus!
- dmmorris
- 3 valves
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The best fix is to replace with WBT bananas.
They are the best (IMO) banana out there. They have a fool-proof locking system built-in.
Shop around for the cheapist price. I bought my last mitten-full from Parts Express
They are the best (IMO) banana out there. They have a fool-proof locking system built-in.
Shop around for the cheapist price. I bought my last mitten-full from Parts Express
beta 14??..........OK!
Mid 70's B&S Tuba
Mid 70's B&S Tuba
- Chuck(G)
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What happned to just soldering the blasted wires on? That'll be your most secure connection.
http://www.cablestogo.com/product.asp?c ... &sku=29784
http://www.cablestogo.com/product.asp?c ... &sku=29784
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- Chuck(G)
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- Chuck(G)
- 6 valves
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Bob Pease, a regular character at National Semi and a columnist for Electronic Design once challenged a bunch of solid-silver speaker cable peddlers to accept his blind listening test. He proposed two opaque boxes of cable--one with No. 16 zip cord in it, the other with a similar length of their solid-silver super cable. IIRC, he never did get any takers.bloke wrote:They don't make GOLD PLATED solder...and (so far) they don't charge $30-$50/roll for it, either.
His specialty is analog design, but his columns are still fun to read even if you're not an EE:
http://www.elecdesign.com/Authors/Index ... ab=Authors
- dmmorris
- 3 valves
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I'm a strong advocate for hard wiring point-to-point using controlled solder joints. I had an large Grundig stereo system w/ tape, record player, radio, amp, pre-amp, and speakers from the late 50's that was all hard wired when I finished restoration.....no plugs except for the AC line. But if your gonna need to disconnect once in a while (mics, speakers, amps, etc), then solid quality hardware connectors with good strain control are worth their price. There are a lot of crap hardware out there. Yep......there's not much worse "sounding" than a bad solder joint or a poorly terminated banana plug, or any "crap" electrical connection in an audio application.
In my experience, WBT and Neutrik seem to provide the most robust connectors for audio aplications
In my experience, WBT and Neutrik seem to provide the most robust connectors for audio aplications
beta 14??..........OK!
Mid 70's B&S Tuba
Mid 70's B&S Tuba
- Chuck(G)
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...and what do folks think holds the innards of their priceless audio gear together? Chewing gum?the elephant wrote:Bloke is right. A loose and intermittent connection that is gold plated is far better that nasty old solder! Solder is the old way and gold plated crap hardware is the new way. And everyone knows that newer methods are always better!
I've got a bunch of high-end gold-plated speaker binding posts that I picked up on the surplus market. The thing that I found that was funny was that the "inside" ends of these posts are terminated in solder lugs that will admit a wire not much larger than no. 20.
- dmmorris
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- Chuck(G)
- 6 valves
- Posts: 5679
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 12:48 am
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- dmmorris
- 3 valves
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- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 9:05 am
- Location: From far away as Jupiter sulfur mines, way down by the methane sea.
Never tried it...don't have the need, but......
maybe these products could help if ya really gotta go gold: http://sra-solder.com/gold.htm
maybe these products could help if ya really gotta go gold: http://sra-solder.com/gold.htm
beta 14??..........OK!
Mid 70's B&S Tuba
Mid 70's B&S Tuba