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Reddit mentions of Monoprice 6ft Premier Series XLR Male to 1/4inch TRS Male 16AWG Cable (Gold Plated)

Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 13

We found 13 Reddit mentions of Monoprice 6ft Premier Series XLR Male to 1/4inch TRS Male 16AWG Cable (Gold Plated). Here are the top ones.

Monoprice 6ft Premier Series XLR Male to 1/4inch TRS Male 16AWG Cable (Gold Plated)
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Monoprice line of professional audio cables brings you high performance Cables at rock bottom pricesBalanced Audio cables utilize impedance balanced lines that reduce EM and RF noise and extend the effective range of the cable runThey have a separate braided Shield to provide additional resistance to interference without modulating the interference into the signal
Specs:
Height1.2 Inches
Length7.1 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateApril 2019
Size6Ft
Weight0.01 Pounds
Width4.7 Inches

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Found 13 comments on Monoprice 6ft Premier Series XLR Male to 1/4inch TRS Male 16AWG Cable (Gold Plated):

u/altdecay · 3 pointsr/makinghiphop

The Scarlett 2i2 is a solid interface for its price. Two inputs, a headphone output, and a monitor output in the back (with a left and right channel, so she can connect both of her KRKs). She'll need two of these to connect her monitors to the interface. The interface will also allow her to upgrade mics later on (from USB mics to mics that connect via XLR, which opens up a whole new world in terms of quality).

If you want to upgrade her software, Logic would be the best bet if she likes the workflow of Garageband. Garageband is basically baby Logic (you can even import Garageband projects!) and it's only $200.

Hope this helps!

u/KRM_Sound · 3 pointsr/AudioPost

KRK Rokit 5 G3 are amazing for their price.

XLR-to-TRS cables, get two of these as well. The 2i2 connects to monitors via 1/4", and the KRKs themselves can use XLR, 1/4", or RCA.


u/homeboi808 · 3 pointsr/audiophile

My bad, the XLR on the id14 is only for mic inputs (crappy label job on their part). It uses TRS, so a male TRS to male XLR cable, like so.

u/kavokie · 3 pointsr/WeAreTheMusicMakers

If going from a TRS (1/4) to XLR you can use a cable like this. It is balanced.
http://www.amazon.com/Monoprice-Premier-4inch-16AWG-Plated/dp/B001UJEKZ6/

But honestly for short under 12FT runs RCA is more than fine. At short distances, you will not hear any difference between a balanced or unbalanced run.... If there are massive walls of speakers and power amps with crazy lighting going everywhere and have 50+FT cables, yes get the balanced cables. They would help maintaining a cleaner signal.

If there is noisy power or bad grounding, even balanced cables will have a hum. Its not a magical solution. Its just a recommended practice, since no one knows how each location will be set up, or how clean the power lines are.

u/AceFaith · 3 pointsr/guitarpedals

Tasty chorus is tasty ✔️

Actual ability to play and not a loop washed in delay & reverb or dad blues ❓ Pending upload, please add audio demos!

Good-write up ✔️

Actual example of how it’s used in a real life situation ❌

Cool to see someone getting down with the Mooer Radar. Get some IRs from Celestion or Seacow Cabs in there!

Another hot tip: The Mooer Radar's output is balanced mono TRS, not stereo. If you are going to record using it, I'd strongly advise you to chuck the stereo lead you are using and instead opt for a TRS-XLR cable, as it will reduce noise and give you somewhat more recording dynamics. Something like this.

u/yjkwon91 · 2 pointsr/diyelectronics

I am not 100% sure, but the sound on the left stick was going in and out based on the angle of the aux cable.

Then one day it just stopped completley. So it's a guess. You got any other suggestions?

I'm going to start by assuming that the aux cable is broken.

So I should something like this: https://www.amazon.com/Monoprice-Premier-4inch-16AWG-Plated/dp/B001UJEKZ6/ref=sr_1_8?s=wireless&ie=UTF8&qid=1526612109&sr=1-8&keywords=trs%2Bcable&th=1 and just cut it and solder it together

u/calloustreble · 2 pointsr/modular

I am going to give a crash course on audio levels and cables, as best as I can:

There are a few different types of audio levels and impedances:

  • Mic Level - It low impedance and also low volume. Mic level often uses balanced XLR cable, meaning you have hot and cold signal (+/-) which are the same audio signal in reverse phase to create noise cancellation. You need a mixer or preamp to bring it up in volume.
  • Instrument (Guitar) Level - It is high impedance and usually falls between Mic Level and Line Level. It also often uses unbalanced TS 1/4" cables as used on guitars or keyboarded. It only has a conductor and a shield, so there is no noise cancellation. You will need a preamp to bring it up in volume, as if found on a guitar amp or an audio interface. Guitars run quieter than synths, but both need pre-amplification of some sort.
  • Line Level - This is what your studio monitors are expecting. It also often uses balanced XLR, but can use TRS 1/4" balanced. On the consumer side, it uses stereo TRS unbalanced (such as in an aux cable) or RCA, or a number of cables. Studio monitors, in particular, expect balanced audio since you want to have a noise-free input for professional audio applications.
  • Modular Level - This is even louder than line level and using unbalanced connections with a conductor and sometimes shielded cable. If you plug this into a line level input, you will get a huge amount of volume and noise.

    In all honest, for you, I'd get an output module and that's it. If not, you can try and use a small mixer, but the modular level output may be too hot for a mixer, resulting in the preamps being overdriven and sounding distorted. A simple mixer like a Rolls MX28 may do the trick, as it's designed to take in purely line level and has no preamps - just an overall gain adjustment.

    A simple output module I use is the Strymon AA.1. It's primarily used for integrating to guitar pedals, but it will drop it to usable instrument level, which, in a pinch, can be used on line level inputs if there is a gain knob. More "professionally", I use a Vermona TAI-4, but that's because I use it with my Morphagene and want stereo I/O that is able to have a variable gain adjustment and utilizes XLR so I can easily integrate it with mixers live. Befaco Output V3 has balanced output as well.

    Regardless of what you choose, you should get some 1/4" TRS to XLR balanced audio cables.
u/Yorin · 2 pointsr/audiophile

You'll need a 1/4 jack to XLR (both male). Like one of these.

Then on the backplate of the sub there should be an XLR OUTPUT. So you'll need an XLR Female to XLR male to your speakers,

u/bag_of_puppies · 1 pointr/WeAreTheMusicMakers

That card/breakout cable doesn't look like it has an 1/8-inch output (unless I'm missing this in both the pictures and specs), so no.

You should get two of these. Maybe not this particular brand or cable, but you want a male TRS to male XLR.

u/TheLegionnaire · 1 pointr/audio

This is exactly correct OP.

2 of these:

https://www.amazon.com/Monoprice-Premier-4inch-16AWG-Plated/dp/B001UJEKZ6

Or similar.

u/deplorable-d00d · 1 pointr/BudgetAudiophile

There is no benefit whatsoever. Balanced is balanced.

https://www.amazon.com/Monoprice-Premier-4inch-16AWG-Plated/dp/B001UJEKZ6

u/Meaty_Dorito · 1 pointr/battlestations

I first had them connected to my PC using 2x XLR - 3.5mm (bad idea), and they buzzed like hell. Bought the Scarlett and now they don't make any static noise. The speaker outputs on the Scarlett are balanced, so you want to get balanced TRS 1/4 inch - XLR cables for the sound card / speakers.

Something like this should work: https://www.amazon.com/Monoprice-Premier-4inch-16AWG-Plated/dp/B001UJEKZ6/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=trs+to+xlr&qid=1565487350&s=gateway&sr=8-3