This is an eternally debated subject. The general feeling about banana jacks seems to be that the stacking aspect is a great plus (I don't think anyone DOESN'T like that aspect, except that the plugs can quickly stick many inches out of a panel). But to critics, they lend themselves more to cramped panels (like Serge or old Paia) and that their lack of shielding, and the thinner cords in general feeling flimsy, don't give many users the warm-fuzzy. Other argue that, since oscilloscope probes use these kinds of cables, what's wrong with them? I'm sure someone can make an argument about how the grounds are handled as well in systems without shielded cables. A lot of it is probably just personal preference. Personally, I don't care for them at all. I like the big beefy 1/4" plugs ala Moog, MOTM, and most of my other musical instruments. And the 1/8" versions just seem like little weenie versions of their big brothers, offering nothing extra such as the banana's stacking feature, so why use them? Again, only to save space on cramped panels, which is better to avoid in the first place by not cramping your panels! -----Original Message----- From: perpetual@... [mailto:perpetual@...] Sent: Wednesday, 14 March, 2001 12:29 PM To: motm@yahoogroups.com Subject: [motm] bananna plugs (was Modcan) what's the bias against bananna plugs all about?
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RE: [motm] bananna plugs (was Modcan)
2001-03-14 by Tkacs, Ken
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