Our house is being re-wired in a few weeks, and I thought I'd take the opportunity to lay some multicore cable while the floorboards were up. I have my studio in an upstairs room but often use the living room as a live room (it's larger and contains my piano) so running leads up and down the stairs is becoming a pain!
The problem is that the audio cable has to be laid alongside mains AC. I realise this is not a good idea, but for various practical reasons there's nothing I can do about it - either I lay the cable here or don't bother doing it at all. We can however put the cable in copper pipe for most of its length, which hopefully should ameliorate the problems.
Knowing this, I planned to use Sommer Mistral cable, which is double-shielded. The 12-way cable would be sufficient (13mm diameter) and I'd like to terminate it at either end in an 8 XLR + 4 jack wall box (with the cable running from the floor up a channel in the wall as normal). However, I'm a little concerned that a cable of this weight won't manage the tight turns required from floor to wall and from wall to mounting box. Does anyone who's done something similar (in a domestic setting) have any advice?
Many thanks,
James.
Multicore wiring
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Possibly the audio cable can be laid in the next stud along for much of the run, but it will definately have to be next to the AC when they all descend from the top floor to the bottom floor.
Is it a waste of time? And even if I get the cable laid, will it be too inflexible to go from the floor to run up a channel in the wall?
J
Is it a waste of time? And even if I get the cable laid, will it be too inflexible to go from the floor to run up a channel in the wall?
J
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Most audio snakes are reasonably flexible. Can you post a drawing or picture of what you've got or trying to do? Maybe some measurements? If you're able to separate the snake from the electrical by having (let's say the electrical on the far side of the one cavity and the audio snake on the far side of the other cavity) giving some distance from each other, you should be ok. (I don't know the metric numbers so I can't be more specific nor do I know how far apart the stud spacing is in European construction???) Is there a reason why they need to be together going from top to bottom?
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If you're not on a real tight budget, and are not trying to maintain a totally analog signal path, there are solutions out there that convert all your multi-channel audio to digital and then you only have to run a single Cat-5e cable for at least 8 channels - this would eliminate the necessity for separation of audio/power. Otherwise, expect a constant hum level (50 hZ in your case) - you can certainly do all the standard things to cut that down, but in the end the best way to get rid of noise is to NOT generate it in the first place.
Some links for study;
http://www.rwonline.com/reference-room/ ... ne_5.shtml
http://www.rane.com/pdf/cobrapps.pdf
http://www.qscaudio.com/pdfs/raveapgd.pdf
Don't have time to get into this much further; also, haven't had time to dig into it much myself. Still, looks promising for some things. Cost is not cheap, seems like I saw prices of around $1-2k for both ends of a 16 channel system, not positive though... Steve
Some links for study;
http://www.rwonline.com/reference-room/ ... ne_5.shtml
http://www.rane.com/pdf/cobrapps.pdf
http://www.qscaudio.com/pdfs/raveapgd.pdf
Don't have time to get into this much further; also, haven't had time to dig into it much myself. Still, looks promising for some things. Cost is not cheap, seems like I saw prices of around $1-2k for both ends of a 16 channel system, not positive though... Steve