If your table is quiet with no ground wire why bother with it?
Direct drive turntables: Some models require grounding, while others (especially newer ones) may not
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@yogiboy exactly what I did. Left it off and enjoying the music Connecting it probably created a ground loop somewhere. |
In any audio circuit there are two ground paths: chassis ground and signal ground. In a balanced system these two ground paths run independently, hence the 3 pin XLR connector. In an unbalanced system, aka the typical home stereo system, the two grounds are combines at the shield of the RCA connectors. If your preamp and peripherals are also grounded with a three prong AC plug, you are running two ground paths at the same time, often causing a ground loop and raising your noise level. Best practice: As for your turntable: Your cartridge and turntable are a balanced system and for the quietest operation, the chassis grounds should be connected between turntable and preamp chassis - that’s why there’s a ground screw. If you have lifted your peripherals’ chassis grounds (by not connecting the ground in on your AC plug except at the power amp), then your turntable ground chassis ground link will work properly and you will get the lowest possible noise your equipment allows. However: This is NOT the way this is usually done. refs: And have a look at these remarkable audio cables, the most transparent and accurate interconnects on the market: |