Can anyone tell me when XLR connections were first used on stereo equipment. (what years)?


I know RCA connections can produce incredible sounding music, too, but in my experience, I've always found XLR connections sound more detailed to my ears. I'm interested in a vintage integrated amp. Perhaps that's an oxymoron. Anyway, please let me know units/brands that you know about.

mewsickbuff

'vintage' american might be reversed: from that article, verify hot and cold

"Prior to the introduction of this standard, the wiring of pins 2 and 3 varied. The pin 2 "hot" and pin 3 "cold" convention was typically used by European and Japanese equipment manufacturers, but American companies used pin 3 "hot" and pin 2 "cold". This caused problems when interconnecting equipment with unbalanced connections. The pin 3 "hot" convention is now obsolete but is still found on vintage equipment.[21] Pin 1 has always been ground and/or shield if the cable is shielded, and many connectors connect it internally to the connector shell or case."

From what I've heard, Ralph from Atmasphere advocated for XLR connections many decades ago.

RCA or XLR?

Should be single ended (shared ground) or balanced ground.

Single ended exposes the signal to RF (etc.) contamination.

@mewsickbuff Atma-Sphere was the first home stereo manufacturer to regularly offer balanced line products. The MA-1 amplifier was first in 1987 and the MP-1 preamp followed in 1989. Both not only had balanced inputs and outputs (including LOMC phono section) but were also fully differential and balanced internally. Both also supported AES48, the balanced line standard. The MP-1 also supports +4dB operation which is common with studio equipment no intended for home use.

The MP-1 also uses a direct-coupled method of supporting the balanced standard, for which we were awarded a patent.

Thank you all for your input. XLR has quite an interesting history. Can anyone recommend other stereo brands that used XLR in and out connections? Mid-fi  and no tubes is preferred. Thanks.