A signal wire combined with a ground wire in a twisted pair won't make much
difference as far as signal quality goes. The twist just helps with
cable/wire management.
MOTM tends to ground through switched jacks highly sensitive or precision
unattenuated CVs such as 1V/octave inputs. It is overkill for anything
else. As far as I can tell, you may not even notice a difference if you
don't ground the precision inputs.
John Loffink
The Microtonal Synthesis Web Site
http://www.microtonal-synthesis.comThe Wavemakers Synthesizer Web Site
http://www.wavemakers-synth.com > -----Original Message-----
> From: motm@yahoogroups.com [mailto:motm@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Mark
> Sent: Saturday, June 02, 2007 9:51 AM
> To: motm@yahoogroups.com
> Subject: [motm] floating twisted pair cable on one end??
>
>
> Does anyone have any thoughts on using twisted pair cable when there
> is no adjacent ground connection on the PCB?? For example, most
> third-party PCB's do not have ground connections near the jumper
> connections for CV inputs and outputs. However, they usually have a
> method of connecting the shields of all the jacks to ground. So if
> the panel end is tied to ground, is there an advantage in using
> twisted pair cable when connecting a CV's to the PCB even when the
> ground wire is not connected at the PCB??
>
> Also, as a general rule, should unused high-impedance inputs be
> connected to ground using switched jacks?? Some of the MOTM
> instructions say to do this, while others don't.
>
>