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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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#1
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I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new
plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red & blue and in the other lead black & yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) |
#2
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![]() "Patrick" I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red & blue and in the other lead black & yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) ** Stick the damn phones on your fat head and connect pairs of wires to a AA battery until you hear a click. Now you have your two pairs of wires. Wire them to a plug any way around you like and connect the same AA to the common and both positives at the same time. If the click seems to comes from right inside your head - game over. If you need more explanation - you do not deserve it. ...... Phil |
#3
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On 12:44 14 May 2011, Phil Allison wrote:
"Patrick" I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red & blue and in the other lead black & yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) ** Stick the damn phones on your fat head and connect pairs of wires to a AA battery until you hear a click. Now you have your two pairs of wires. Wire them to a plug any way around you like and connect the same AA to the common and both positives at the same time. If the click seems to comes from right inside your head - game over. If you need more explanation - you do not deserve it. ..... Phil The four wires are already grouped as two pairs, so we already know which two wires go together. I want to get the phasing right (even for headphones). I need to know which color wire in each pair is the positive. Are you familiar with decoding these red & blue and black & yellow headphone wires? |
#4
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In article ,
Patrick wrote: I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red & blue and in the other lead black & yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) Black and blue are the commons. Not that it would make any difference if you commoned red and yellow. You can check for sure by unplugging the leads from each actual earpiece (red and blue plugs), but be careful to pull on the actual plug only. The pins are of slightly different sizes. Hope you have a source of the muffs for these - they crumble to dust quite quickly. -- *Am I ambivalent? Well, yes and no. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
#5
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On 14/05/2011 12:54, Patrick wrote:
On 12:44 14 May 2011, Phil Allison wrote: "Patrick" I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red& blue and in the other lead black& yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) ** Stick the damn phones on your fat head and connect pairs of wires to a AA battery until you hear a click. Now you have your two pairs of wires. Wire them to a plug any way around you like and connect the same AA to the common and both positives at the same time. If the click seems to comes from right inside your head - game over. If you need more explanation - you do not deserve it. ..... Phil The four wires are already grouped as two pairs, so we already know which two wires go together. I want to get the phasing right (even for headphones). I need to know which color wire in each pair is the positive. No you don't need to know it. It will be abundantly clear if you have the phase in one ear wrong by 180 degrees - unless that is you are deaf. Are you familiar with decoding these red& blue and black& yellow headphone wires? I would hazard a guess red, yellow are positive and blue, black negative. But why didn't you make a note of where the cables were connected when you took the original apart? There are only four wires as two trivially distinct pairs - the worst that can happen is you need to flip a pair if you choose incorrectly. Regards, Martin Brown |
#6
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![]() "Patrick" Phil Allison wrote: "Patrick" I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red & blue and in the other lead black & yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) ** Stick the damn phones on your fat head and connect pairs of wires to a AA battery until you hear a click. Now you have your two pairs of wires. Wire them to a plug any way around you like and connect the same AA to the common and both positives at the same time. If the click seems to comes from right inside your head - game over. If you need more explanation - you do not deserve it. The four wires are already grouped as two pairs, so we already know which two wires go together. I want to get the phasing right (even for headphones). I need to know which color wire in each pair is the positive. ** I just gave the the answer - you ****ing idiot. ..... Phil |
#7
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On 13:22 14 May 2011, Martin Brown wrote:
On 14/05/2011 12:54, Patrick wrote: On 12:44 14 May 2011, Phil Allison wrote: "Patrick" I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red& blue and in the other lead black& yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) ** Stick the damn phones on your fat head and connect pairs of wires to a AA battery until you hear a click. Now you have your two pairs of wires. Wire them to a plug any way around you like and connect the same AA to the common and both positives at the same time. If the click seems to comes from right inside your head - game over. If you need more explanation - you do not deserve it. ..... Phil The four wires are already grouped as two pairs, so we already know which two wires go together. I want to get the phasing right (even for headphones). I need to know which color wire in each pair is the positive. No you don't need to know it. It will be abundantly clear if you have the phase in one ear wrong by 180 degrees - unless that is you are deaf. Are you familiar with decoding these red& blue and black& yellow headphone wires? I would hazard a guess red, yellow are positive and blue, black negative. But why didn't you make a note of where the cables were connected when you took the original apart? There are only four wires as two trivially distinct pairs - the worst that can happen is you need to flip a pair if you choose incorrectly. Regards, Martin Brown Years ago someone wired up these headphones to a 1/4 inch plug and they they say they don't know what polarity meant. There's no point following their clueless wiring. Out of phase headphone transducers create a far more subtle adverse effect than that noticed in loudspeakers, so it is not something immediately evident by A-B testing. Nor is testing necessary if someone here knows what the color coding is. |
#8
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![]() "Patrick = another PITA Jerk Out of phase headphone transducers create a far more subtle adverse effect than that noticed in loudspeakers, so it is not something immediately evident by A-B testing. ** That is 100% ****ing BULL**** !!!!!!!!! With any mono signal, the difference is HUGE. Do exactly what I said you PITA moron. If the click seems to comes from right inside your head - game over. If you need more explanation - you do not deserve it. ..... Phil |
#9
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On 13:07 14 May 2011, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Patrick wrote: I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red & blue and in the other lead black & yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) Black and blue are the commons. Not that it would make any difference if you commoned red and yellow. You can check for sure by unplugging the leads from each actual earpiece (red and blue plugs), but be careful to pull on the actual plug only. The pins are of slightly different sizes. Hope you have a source of the muffs for these - they crumble to dust quite quickly. You must know the headphones well because I had long forgotten the leads plugged into the earpieces. I didn't realize the mini plugs were keyed to go in only one way around. With that info I could have continuity tested the colored leads to each of the larger pins on the plugs but you saved me doing that becauase you have given me the color coding too. Thank you. You're right about the muffs crumbling. I threw them out. First I'll see what the cans sound like now and then decide if it's worth getting new muffs. It's been instructive to see how many people misunderstood what the original question was trying to solve and they gave obviously useless, if not misleading, advice. It's never been the same since Eternal September. |
#10
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On 13:49 14 May 2011, Phil Allison wrote:
"Patrick = another PITA Jerk Out of phase headphone transducers create a far more subtle adverse effect than that noticed in loudspeakers, so it is not something immediately evident by A-B testing. ** That is 100% ****ing BULL**** !!!!!!!!! With any mono signal, the difference is HUGE. There is no phase cancellation like there is for speaker sounds because the sound from each headphone transducer is interfereing with the other. Your lack of knowledge is made all the more lamentable by the unwarranted self-assurance with which you conduct yourself. Do exactly what I said you PITA moron. If the click seems to comes from right inside your head - game over. If you need more explanation - you do not deserve it. .... Phil Your poor knowledge is a liability to this group because your can't recognize your inadequate understanding even after it has been politely explained to you. I hope you don't mind but you are now in my plonk file to spare me reading your further pitiful lamentations. |
#11
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"Patrick = another PITA Jerk"
Out of phase headphone transducers create a far more subtle adverse effect than that noticed in loudspeakers, so it is not something immediately evident by A-B testing. ** That is 100% ****ing BULL**** !!!!!!!!! With any mono signal, the difference is HUGE. There is no phase cancellation .. ** My god you are one ARROGANT ****HEAD !!! ****ING TRY IT !!! The difference is ****ING HUGE. You stinking pile of autistic ****. ..... Phil |
#12
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![]() "Patrick is a Psycho ASSHOLE " It's been instructive to see how many people misunderstood what the original question was trying to solve and they gave obviously useless, if not misleading, advice. It's never been the same since Eternal September. ** Listen here - pal. You do not need any headphones worn over your ears - YOU need a ****ing bullet between the ears. Same goes for the retarded bitch that bore you and the donkey that knocked her up. Never come back or I will really tear you apart. ..... Phil |
#13
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"Patrick" wrote in message
... On 13:07 14 May 2011, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Patrick wrote: I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red & blue and in the other lead black & yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) Black and blue are the commons. Not that it would make any difference if you commoned red and yellow. You can check for sure by unplugging the leads from each actual earpiece (red and blue plugs), but be careful to pull on the actual plug only. The pins are of slightly different sizes. Hope you have a source of the muffs for these - they crumble to dust quite quickly. You must know the headphones well because I had long forgotten the leads plugged into the earpieces. I didn't realize the mini plugs were keyed to go in only one way around. With that info I could have continuity tested the colored leads to each of the larger pins on the plugs but you saved me doing that becauase you have given me the color coding too. Thank you. You're right about the muffs crumbling. I threw them out. First I'll see what the cans sound like now and then decide if it's worth getting new muffs. It's been instructive to see how many people misunderstood what the original question was trying to solve and they gave obviously useless, if not misleading, advice. It's never been the same since Eternal September. Actually that's untrue, nobody misunderstood the question or gave useless or misleading advice. And Phil is quite right, the effect of having the headphones out of phase with each other is not at all subtle, it is at least as obvious as it would be with speakers. Just because there is no phase cancellation in the air doesn't mean that the brain is not immediately aware of the phase difference heard in the two ears. David. |
#14
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On 05/14/2011 04:54 AM, Patrick wrote:
On 12:44 14 May 2011, Phil Allison wrote: "Patrick" I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red& blue and in the other lead black& yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) ** Stick the damn phones on your fat head and connect pairs of wires to a AA battery until you hear a click. Now you have your two pairs of wires. Wire them to a plug any way around you like and connect the same AA to the common and both positives at the same time. If the click seems to comes from right inside your head - game over. If you need more explanation - you do not deserve it. ..... Phil The four wires are already grouped as two pairs, so we already know which two wires go together. I want to get the phasing right (even for headphones). I need to know which color wire in each pair is the positive. Are you familiar with decoding these red& blue and black& yellow headphone wires? "If the click seems to come from right inside your head - game over". What more do you need? Phil's given you a test to see if the phasing is correct, can you not figure it out, or what to do if the click seems to come from your right or your left? -- Tim Wescott Wescott Design Services http://www.wescottdesign.com Do you need to implement control loops in software? "Applied Control Theory for Embedded Systems" was written for you. See details at http://www.wescottdesign.com/actfes/actfes.html |
#15
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On May 14, 5:07*am, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote: In article , * *Patrick wrote: I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) Hope you have a source of the muffs for these - they crumble to dust quite quickly. Did anyone ever come up with muffs better than the OEM crap for these? I have two or three bald pair at the back of the cabinet. I ordered new muffs for one of these, once, at some amazing fraction of the cost of a new set of headphones. (Hearing I had bought new muffs, a friend pressed his on me. Frustrated, he had bought Koss headphones.) |
#16
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On Sat, 14 May 2011 23:22:51 +1000, Phil Allison wrote:
"Patrick is a Psycho ASSHOLE " It's been instructive to see how many people misunderstood what the original question was trying to solve and they gave obviously useless, if not misleading, advice. It's never been the same since Eternal September. ** Listen here - pal. You do not need any headphones worn over your ears - YOU need a ****ing bullet between the ears. Same goes for the retarded bitch that bore you and the donkey that knocked her up. Never come back or I will really tear you apart. .... Phil This type of threat should be forwarded to http://www.individual.net/ with the entire header field including message ID. There is no excuse for this type of venomous reply and most all responsible news providers will terminate the responsible account without question. -- Live Fast Die Young, Leave A Pretty Corpse |
#17
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![]() "Meat Plow" wrote in message news ![]() On Sat, 14 May 2011 23:22:51 +1000, Phil Allison wrote: "Patrick is a Psycho ASSHOLE " It's been instructive to see how many people misunderstood what the original question was trying to solve and they gave obviously useless, if not misleading, advice. It's never been the same since Eternal September. ** Listen here - pal. You do not need any headphones worn over your ears - YOU need a ****ing bullet between the ears. Same goes for the retarded bitch that bore you and the donkey that knocked her up. Never come back or I will really tear you apart. .... Phil This type of threat should be forwarded to http://www.individual.net/ with the entire header field including message ID. There is no excuse for this type of venomous reply..... Au Contraire, Phil is the excuse for this type of venomous reply. Mikek PS. Patrick, We do get some rather interesting diatribe from Phil, rarely with any good reason. Don't take it personal, he's not nice to anybody. Phil has some issues he deals with, but when he answers an electronics or audio question he's most likely right. |
#18
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Patrick wrote:
On 13:49 14 May 2011, Phil Allison wrote: "Patrick = another PITA Jerk Out of phase headphone transducers create a far more subtle adverse effect than that noticed in loudspeakers, so it is not something immediately evident by A-B testing. ** That is 100% ****ing BULL**** !!!!!!!!! With any mono signal, the difference is HUGE. There is no phase cancellation like there is for speaker sounds because the sound from each headphone transducer is interfereing with the other. Wrong, I'm afraid. I myself have heard a 2-channel sound clip on the net that irrefutably demonstrated that interference does occur in the brain, at lowish frequencies, but not that low. Up to a few hundred Hz. It was a clip of (f Hz) in one channel/earphone, and (f+delta Hz) into the other earphone. With just either (one) earphone inserted, you could hear just a plain tone of f or (f+delta) as expected. With both in, you heard the beating at a few Hz, proving that addition/ mixing was taking place in the brain. It sounded very weird, and I was very surprised. but the effect was utterly obvious and undeniable. I can't remember now where I found the sound sample, but IIRC it was a link on Wikipedia. Martin |
#19
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Patrick wrote:
I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red & blue and in the other lead black & yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) From my years of tinkering with old stereo headphones as a teenager, I'm going to confidently guess: Black - Left Ground/-ve Yellow - Left +ve Blue - Right Ground/-ve Red - Right +ve Martin |
#20
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![]() "Patrick" wrote in message ... I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red & blue and in the other lead black & yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) Wire them up to a mono source and insert a dpdt switch so you can easily and quickly reverse the phase of one earpiece. Insert a PVC T coupling between the earpieces. Compare the sound levels coming from the bottom of the T while flipping the switch. Loudest is in phase. Art |
#21
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Artemus wrote:
"Patrick" wrote in message ... I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red & blue and in the other lead black & yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) Wire them up to a mono source and insert a dpdt switch so you can easily and quickly reverse the phase of one earpiece. Insert a PVC T coupling between the earpieces. Compare the sound levels coming from the bottom of the T while flipping the switch. Loudest is in phase. Art But!, Are the ears in phase? :~j Jamie |
#22
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![]() "Tim Wescott" "If the click seems to come from right inside your head - game over". What more do you need? Phil's given you a test to see if the phasing is correct, can you not figure it out, or what to do if the click seems to come from your right or your left? ** If both ear phones work but are wired out of phase, the AA cell click test produces a sound that seems to be originating outside the head on both sides. Mono speech or music sounds much the same. The effect is far MORE pronounced than with typical stereo speakers in a room. The OP demonstrates his a monumental ignorance of headphones, hi-fi sound, usenet etiquette and common sense. ..... Phil |
#23
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![]() "Meat Plow" ** This trolling asshole is a narcissistic psychopath. He knows nothing and understands even less. I want the lunatic jerk kicked right off usenet. Who will help me ? ..... Phil |
#24
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![]() "David Looser" Some damn idiot wrote: It's been instructive to see how many people misunderstood what the original question was trying to solve and they gave obviously useless, if not misleading, advice. It's never been the same since Eternal September. Actually that's untrue, nobody misunderstood the question or gave useless or misleading advice. And Phil is quite right, the effect of having the headphones out of phase with each other is not at all subtle, it is at least as obvious as it would be with speakers. Just because there is no phase cancellation in the air doesn't mean that the brain is not immediately aware of the phase difference heard in the two ears. ** I have come across folk with their hi-fi speakers wired out of phase and gone un-noticed for months or years. Room acoustics and listening position being critical to observing the fact. However, stereo headphones wired out of phase is just the weirdest sound and not tolerated by many for long. Headphone listening is nothing like listening to stereo speakers or natural sounds in the environment - the outer ears are no longer involved and moving one's head has no effect on the sound heard. The stereo effect becomes extreme and the "sound stage" appears to be inside one's head extending left and right as well. Plus the who damn thing moves about with your head movements. ..... Phil |
#25
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![]() "David Looser" wrote in message ... "Patrick" wrote in message ... On 13:07 14 May 2011, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Patrick wrote: I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red & blue and in the other lead black & yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) Black and blue are the commons. Not that it would make any difference if you commoned red and yellow. You can check for sure by unplugging the leads from each actual earpiece (red and blue plugs), but be careful to pull on the actual plug only. The pins are of slightly different sizes. Hope you have a source of the muffs for these - they crumble to dust quite quickly. You must know the headphones well because I had long forgotten the leads plugged into the earpieces. I didn't realize the mini plugs were keyed to go in only one way around. With that info I could have continuity tested the colored leads to each of the larger pins on the plugs but you saved me doing that becauase you have given me the color coding too. Thank you. You're right about the muffs crumbling. I threw them out. First I'll see what the cans sound like now and then decide if it's worth getting new muffs. It's been instructive to see how many people misunderstood what the original question was trying to solve and they gave obviously useless, if not misleading, advice. It's never been the same since Eternal September. Actually that's untrue, nobody misunderstood the question or gave useless or misleading advice. And Phil is quite right, the effect of having the headphones out of phase with each other is not at all subtle, it is at least as obvious as it would be with speakers. Just because there is no phase cancellation in the air doesn't mean that the brain is not immediately aware of the phase difference heard in the two ears. David. +1 Arfa |
#26
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On May 14, 7:29*am, Patrick wrote:
I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red & blue and in the other lead black & yellow. *(No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) Sounds like you got your fix. (See Usenet really is good for something...) Still, shoulda bought a pair of AKG K240's. ![]() .....unless you got a huge stash of 8-tracks laying about. !! -mpm |
#27
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On Sat, 14 May 2011 13:55:16 +0100, Patrick
wrote: On 13:07 14 May 2011, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: (snip) Hope you have a source of the muffs for these - they crumble to dust quite quickly. (snip) You're right about the muffs crumbling. I threw them out. First I'll see what the cans sound like now and then decide if it's worth getting new muffs. I have Sennheiser HD414's from ~1980. In the last year the muffs have gone from developing a lasting flat where they rest on a surface, to literally crumbling. Sennheiser's national distributor has replacements for $A9 plus postage. I'm impressed. |
#28
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Patrick wrote:
I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red & blue and in the other lead black & yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) My first guess would be blue+ red- and black+ yellow-, but here's how to find out. First hook them up, arbitrarily starting with what I said, or the other way - it's a coin toss. Listen to something in mono. You'll have to find your own mono source. (finding a mono source is left as an exercise for the student.) If the resulting sound comes from the middle of your head, you got it right. If it sounds like two sources on either side of your head, you've got the polarity wrong on one side or the other. I'm getting this from remembering (I think) that in the old 4-wire phone lines, green was tip and red was ring, and black was tip and yellow was ring. --- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tip_and_ring Hope This Helps! Rich |
#29
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Patrick wrote:
Your lack of knowledge is made all the more lamentable by the unwarranted self-assurance with which you conduct yourself. I believe it's time for you to go **** yourself. Thanks for playing! Rich |
#30
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![]() "Rich Grise" Patrick wrote: Your lack of knowledge is made all the more lamentable by the unwarranted self-assurance with which you conduct yourself. I believe it's time for you to go **** yourself. ** That's more like it !! No kid gloves when dealing with smug, arrogant pricks like Patrick. ..... Phil |
#31
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![]() "legg" Sounds right. ** The OP's headphones are not right until they do. ..... Phil |
#32
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In article ,
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , Patrick wrote: I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red & blue and in the other lead black & yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) Black and blue are the commons. Not that it would make any difference if you commoned red and yellow. You can check for sure by unplugging the leads from each actual earpiece (red and blue plugs), but be careful to pull on the actual plug only. The pins are of slightly different sizes. Hope you have a source of the muffs for these - they crumble to dust quite quickly. I've been making my own for years, out of open-cell foam -- it comes for free as packaging in all sorts of product boxes. Isaac |
#33
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On Sat, 14 May 2011 22:33:49 +0100, Fleetie
wrote: Patrick wrote: I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red & blue and in the other lead black & yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) From my years of tinkering with old stereo headphones as a teenager, I'm going to confidently guess: Black - Left Ground/-ve Yellow - Left +ve Blue - Right Ground/-ve Red - Right +ve Martin Sounds right. RL |
#34
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![]() "Artemus" wrote in message ... "Patrick" wrote in message ... I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red & blue and in the other lead black & yellow. (No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) Wire them up to a mono source and insert a dpdt switch so you can easily and quickly reverse the phase of one earpiece. Insert a PVC T coupling between the earpieces. Compare the sound levels coming from the bottom of the T while flipping the switch. Loudest is in phase. Art No. Don't mess around with "PVC T-coupling" or any other such nonesense, just put the headphones on and listen. The effect of having them out-of-phase is immediate and obvious. And as Phil said that is s far more reliable method of ensuring correct phasing than assuming that the lead colour use is consistent. David. |
#35
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![]() "David Looser" No. Don't mess around with "PVC T-coupling" or any other such nonesense, just put the headphones on and listen. The effect of having them out-of-phase is immediate and obvious. And as Phil said that is s far more reliable method of ensuring correct phasing than assuming that the lead colour use is consistent. ** Must be lotsa folks who have never had the dubious pleasure of listening to out-of-phase signals on stereo phones - cos moulded on plugs and three wire leads makes doing it even deliberately a bit tricky. But those who have owned or mucked about with * electrostatic * or * electret * head phones might well be aware of how it sounds - as there are four wires to deal with and every chance that at some stage miss-connection to the amp's speaker terminals will create the issue. Damn shame these products have all but disappeared or become extraordinarily expensive. As a reference for sound quality ( or to hear exactly what is on a recording) a pair of Stax Electrostatics were in a class of their own. ..... Phil |
#36
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On May 14, 5:47*pm, "Phil Allison" wrote:
** I have come across folk with their hi-fi speakers wired out of phase and gone un-noticed for months or years. *Room acoustics and listening position being critical to observing the fact. *However, *stereo headphones wired out of phase is just the weirdest sound and not tolerated by many for long. Headphone listening is nothing like listening to stereo speakers or natural sounds in the environment - the outer ears are no longer involved and moving one's head has no effect on the sound heard. The stereo effect becomes extreme and the "sound stage" appears to be inside one's head extending left and right as well. Plus the who damn thing moves about with your head movements. That's why we really should have binaural recordings for headphone playback. Weren't there stereo-to-pseudo-binaural converters at one point? |
#37
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On May 14, 9:07*pm, isw wrote:
In article , *"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , * *Patrick wrote: I have some vinatge headphones (Sennheiser HD424) and want to attach a new plug. Which color wires are the positive ones? The colors in one of the leads are red & blue and in the other lead black & yellow. *(No wire is used as screening - there's just two wires in each lead.) Black and blue are the commons. Not that it would make any difference if you commoned red and yellow. You can check for sure by unplugging the leads from each actual earpiece (red and blue plugs), but be careful to pull on the actual plug only. The pins are of slightly different sizes. Hope you have a source of the muffs for these - they crumble to dust quite quickly. I've been making my own for years, out of open-cell foam -- it comes for free as packaging in all sorts of product boxes. Any tips how? I once bought a Pelican case to hold something disassembled, and I had a heck of a time cutting cavities in the foam provided to fit the pieces. Cutting foam into cylinders would be hard enough -- making them so they can slip over the earpieces seems nightmarish to me. |
#38
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![]() "spamtrap1888" "Phil Allison" ** I have come across folk with their hi-fi speakers wired out of phase and gone un-noticed for months or years. Room acoustics and listening position being critical to observing the fact. However, stereo headphones wired out of phase is just the weirdest sound and not tolerated by many for long. Headphone listening is nothing like listening to stereo speakers or natural sounds in the environment - the outer ears are no longer involved and moving one's head has no effect on the sound heard. The stereo effect becomes extreme and the "sound stage" appears to be inside one's head extending left and right as well. Plus the who damn thing moves about with your head movements. That's why we really should have binaural recordings for headphone playback. Weren't there stereo-to-pseudo-binaural converters at one point? ** An Australian company called " Lake Technology " designed and made the things. Dolby Labs bought them ( circa 2003) and everything went pear shaped. ..... Phil |
#39
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"Phil Allison" wrote in message
... "Meat Plow" ** This trolling asshole is a narcissistic psychopath. He knows nothing and understands even less. I want the lunatic jerk kicked right off usenet. Who will help me ? If the "lunatic jerk" you're referring to is yourself... I'd say everyone in this group. |
#40
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![]() "William Sommer******" "Meat Plow" ** This trolling asshole is a narcissistic psychopath. He knows nothing and understands even less. I want the lunatic jerk kicked right off usenet. Who will help me ? If the "lunatic jerk" you're referring to is yourself... I'd say everyone in this group. ** Ain't it just amazing !! If you go after ONE troll, the rest of the ****s come in and gang up on you. So you gotta take the WHOLE lot on, all at once. What a bunch of gutless, fascist pricks they are. ..... Phil |
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