Forums Music Connecting up a USB audio interface

Viewing 21 posts - 1 through 21 (of 21 total)
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  • #1041787
    Asdf
    Participant

      I ordered a new midi keyboard controller and it comes with a free USB AI which is only worth about 25 quid but it’s gotta be better than this crappy onboard soundcard I have in my laptop!

      At the moment I have some speakers with a 3.5mm jack which plugs in to where the headphones go and I wanna know if I just do the same with this AI or will I have to buy another cable which I can connect the 3.5mm jack to?

      Here is a large image on the audio interface:

      http://cachepe.zzounds.com/media/quality,85/brand,zzounds/UCA202_big-c5c66c5ee06b3a89a1fe3b25a7ba0cb3.jpg

      #1114475
      Playground Politics
      Participant

        looks like an audio cable or phono cable, u need a phono to jack

        #1134793
        Playground Politics
        Participant

          looks like an audio cable or phono cable, u need a phono to jack

          #1114467
          Acidfairy
          Participant
            Playground Politics wrote:
            looks like an audio cable or phono cable, u need a phono to jack

            Nah coz if the speakers have the cable hardwired to them he needs a female 3.5m jack to phono cable..

            #1134784
            Acidfairy
            Participant
              Playground Politics wrote:
              looks like an audio cable or phono cable, u need a phono to jack

              Nah coz if the speakers have the cable hardwired to them he needs a female 3.5m jack to phono cable..

              #1114472
              Asdf
              Participant

                Can you recommend me one? I am looking bu I cannot find anything.

                #1134790
                Asdf
                Participant

                  Can you recommend me one? I am looking bu I cannot find anything.

                  #1114468
                  Acidfairy
                  Participant

                    Yeah i’ve been having probs too so came up with this solution for ya..

                    Get a phono to 3.5mm jack cable and one of these.. n29ap.jpg its a 3.5mm stereo coupler, it’ll allow you to put the 3.5mm jack from your speakers in one end and the 3.5mm jack from the phono to jack cable in the other.. you can get them in maplins.. that one is a gold one as it £1.89 but u can get them cheaper likes..

                    #1134786
                    Acidfairy
                    Participant

                      Yeah i’ve been having probs too so came up with this solution for ya..

                      Get a phono to 3.5mm jack cable and one of these.. n29ap.jpg its a 3.5mm stereo coupler, it’ll allow you to put the 3.5mm jack from your speakers in one end and the 3.5mm jack from the phono to jack cable in the other.. you can get them in maplins.. that one is a gold one as it £1.89 but u can get them cheaper likes..

                      #1114469
                      Acidfairy
                      Participant

                        The link for it is here http://www.maplin.co.uk/Module.aspx?TabID=1&ModuleNo=34619&doy=29m6
                        be warned maplins site is pish and takes forever to load and here’s the link for the cable http://www.maplin.co.uk/Module.aspx?ModuleNo=31700&C=Maplin&U=SearchTop&T=PHONO%20TO%20JACK&doy=29m6

                        #1134787
                        Acidfairy
                        Participant

                          The link for it is here http://www.maplin.co.uk/Module.aspx?TabID=1&ModuleNo=34619&doy=29m6
                          be warned maplins site is pish and takes forever to load and here’s the link for the cable http://www.maplin.co.uk/Module.aspx?ModuleNo=31700&C=Maplin&U=SearchTop&T=PHONO%20TO%20JACK&doy=29m6

                          #1114473
                          Asdf
                          Participant

                            Ok cheers, I wonder if it will effect sound quality? I guess for less than a couple quid its worth a try.

                            #1134791
                            Asdf
                            Participant

                              Ok cheers, I wonder if it will effect sound quality? I guess for less than a couple quid its worth a try.

                              #1114470
                              noname
                              Participant

                                Or you can get a 3.5mm socket to twin phono – like here on ebay…:wink:

                                #1134788
                                noname
                                Participant

                                  Or you can get a 3.5mm socket to twin phono – like here on ebay…:wink:

                                  #1114474
                                  Asdf
                                  Participant

                                    Yes thats just what I need but, cheers!

                                    #1134792
                                    Asdf
                                    Participant

                                      Yes thats just what I need but, cheers!

                                      #1114466
                                      General Lighting
                                      Moderator

                                        a small adaptor like that, provided it has no loose connections, will make no difference to the sound quality.

                                        Most of the stuff chatted about “premium connectors” in hi-fi/sound engineering is complete rubbish invented to sell overpriced goods, you just need them to be well-constructed and not fall apart (particularly if you are actually playing out as opposed to just making tunes in a project studio).

                                        I once worked for a company that kitted out the BBC, Anglia and Rapture amongst other broadcasters and all the professionals just used the standard XLRs and other connectors out of RS, Farnell and Canford – although they preferred metal body connectors and heavy duty cable for robustness.

                                        You’d probably be able to get all the stuff you need in the Ipswich store but I’d check with them first that they’ve got it in stock if you are travelling down specially…

                                        #1134783
                                        General Lighting
                                        Moderator

                                          a small adaptor like that, provided it has no loose connections, will make no difference to the sound quality.

                                          Most of the stuff chatted about “premium connectors” in hi-fi/sound engineering is complete rubbish invented to sell overpriced goods, you just need them to be well-constructed and not fall apart (particularly if you are actually playing out as opposed to just making tunes in a project studio).

                                          I once worked for a company that kitted out the BBC, Anglia and Rapture amongst other broadcasters and all the professionals just used the standard XLRs and other connectors out of RS, Farnell and Canford – although they preferred metal body connectors and heavy duty cable for robustness.

                                          You’d probably be able to get all the stuff you need in the Ipswich store but I’d check with them first that they’ve got it in stock if you are travelling down specially…

                                          #1114471
                                          noname
                                          Participant
                                            General Lighting wrote:
                                            a small adaptor like that, provided it has no loose connections, will make no difference to the sound quality.

                                            Most of the stuff chatted about “premium connectors” in hi-fi/sound engineering is complete rubbish invented to sell overpriced goods, you just need them to be well-constructed and not fall apart (particularly if you are actually playing out as opposed to just making tunes in a project studio).

                                            I once worked for a company that kitted out the BBC, Anglia and Rapture amongst other broadcasters and all the professionals just used the standard XLRs and other connectors out of RS, Farnell and Canford – although they preferred metal body connectors and heavy duty cable for robustness.

                                            You’d probably be able to get all the stuff you need in the Ipswich store but I’d check with them first that they’ve got it in stock if you are travelling down specially…

                                            Aye – for sure. The only advantage of gold connectors is they don’t corrode as easily as other metals (unless your connections are getting damp regularly, in which case you have other problems anyway, you won’t have any trouble with corrosion)… And gold is a bloody useless conductor of electricity, as well as being a very soft metal and so prone to becoming misshapen if handled “roughly”….

                                            And as for cable, don’t even go there…:crazy_dru The amount of steaming horse sh*t* spoken by people trying to sell cable for more cash really does beggar belief – Unless it’s a mic cable, or some other kind of high impedance source (where the capacitance of a long cable run can make a difference), the cable just needs to satisfy 2 basic criteria – 1) can it handle the power you are going to feed through it without melting/setting fire, and 2)is it strong enough to stand up to what you intend to use it for…..

                                            I use 16amp mains cable for all speaker connections in the rig, and standard installation cable (£30 for 100m) for the interconnects between electronic boxes (with standard metal xlr’s/jacks/speakons as appropriate for connectors) – which I make myself so I know they’re well made :groucho:. Doesn’t take a huge amount of skill with a soldering iron, and means you can connect pretty much anything to anything if you have a selection connectors….

                                            #1134789
                                            noname
                                            Participant
                                              General Lighting wrote:
                                              a small adaptor like that, provided it has no loose connections, will make no difference to the sound quality.

                                              Most of the stuff chatted about “premium connectors” in hi-fi/sound engineering is complete rubbish invented to sell overpriced goods, you just need them to be well-constructed and not fall apart (particularly if you are actually playing out as opposed to just making tunes in a project studio).

                                              I once worked for a company that kitted out the BBC, Anglia and Rapture amongst other broadcasters and all the professionals just used the standard XLRs and other connectors out of RS, Farnell and Canford – although they preferred metal body connectors and heavy duty cable for robustness.

                                              You’d probably be able to get all the stuff you need in the Ipswich store but I’d check with them first that they’ve got it in stock if you are travelling down specially…

                                              Aye – for sure. The only advantage of gold connectors is they don’t corrode as easily as other metals (unless your connections are getting damp regularly, in which case you have other problems anyway, you won’t have any trouble with corrosion)… And gold is a bloody useless conductor of electricity, as well as being a very soft metal and so prone to becoming misshapen if handled “roughly”….

                                              And as for cable, don’t even go there…:crazy_dru The amount of steaming horse sh*t* spoken by people trying to sell cable for more cash really does beggar belief – Unless it’s a mic cable, or some other kind of high impedance source (where the capacitance of a long cable run can make a difference), the cable just needs to satisfy 2 basic criteria – 1) can it handle the power you are going to feed through it without melting/setting fire, and 2)is it strong enough to stand up to what you intend to use it for…..

                                              I use 16amp mains cable for all speaker connections in the rig, and standard installation cable (£30 for 100m) for the interconnects between electronic boxes (with standard metal xlr’s/jacks/speakons as appropriate for connectors) – which I make myself so I know they’re well made :groucho:. Doesn’t take a huge amount of skill with a soldering iron, and means you can connect pretty much anything to anything if you have a selection connectors….

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                                            Forums Music Connecting up a USB audio interface