Free Shipping with no minimum purchase. Learn more »

Cart (800) 222-4700



Expert Center Sweetcare

«Back to Glossary Menu

Search:

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 0-9

Balanced
In audio, the opposite of Unbalanced. For us balanced refers to a type of AC electrical signal having two "legs" independent of ground. One is generally considered positive (+) and the other negative (-) in voltage and current flow with respect to ground. Unlike unbalanced audio lines there is no "signal" carried in the shield or ground connection unless there is a fault. The main benefit is that any noise that gets induced into the line will be common to both the positive and negative sides and thus canceled when it arrives at its destination, assuming the destination is balanced. This phenomenon is called "Common Mode Rejection" and basically just means that any signals common to both the positive and negative legs of balanced lines get canceled. This happens because when the receiving device looks at the signal the common noise actually shows up as out of phase with itself, and gets cancelled. Think of it as if the negative (-) signal gets inverted to positive (+) before use, which puts the desired audio signal in phase with the already positive other leg and at the same time causes the undesired common noise to become out of phase with itself. Clear as mud? Balanced lines are generally much better for long cable runs due to their ability to reject induced noises. XLR and TRS type cables are designed to transmit balanced audio from one balanced device to another. A standard 1/4-inch guitar cable is an example of an unbalanced cable. Another (newer) application of balancing that is becoming popular in audio systems is the idea of balanced power systems. Fundamentally the concept is the same. There is a positive and negative (with respect to ground) leg of electricity at every electrical outlet. The idea is that the power supply of any devices connected can then reject any noise induced on the AC line and thus will produce cleaner audio. We'll talk more about balanced AC systems in the future.

B-Bender

Backbeat

Back-Emf

Back Filing

Backline

Backplane

Backplate

Backup/Back Up

Backward Compatible

Backwards Masking

Badge

Baffle

Baffled Stereo

Bagpipe

Bakelite

Balanced

Balanced Power

Ball-end

Balun

Bambino Guitar

Banana Plug

Band

Band Limit

Bandpass

Band Reject Filter

Bandwidth

Banjo

Banjo Tuners

Banjo Tuners

Bank Select

Bantam

Bar

Bar Bridge

Baritone Guitar

Baroque

Barre Chord

Barrier Miking

Bass

Bass Management

Bass Reflex

Bass Trap

Basswood

Baud

Baud Rate

Baxandall Shelving Curve

Baxandall Tone Controls

Beaming

"Beano" Album

Bear Claws

Beat

Beatboxing

Beat Juggling

Beat matching

Beats (or "Beating")

Bebop

Bel

Bell Filter

Bell Mode

Belly

Belt Drive

Bend

Beryllium

Beta

Betamax (or shortened to "Beta")

Beta Test

Bezier CurveBezier Curve

Bi-Amp

Bi-Directional

Bi-flex Truss Rod

Bi-phase modulation (Binary Phase-shift keying)

Bi-phase Sync

Bias

Bias Beat

Bias Beat

Bias Beat

Bias Beat

Bichord

Bigsby

"Bikini" Guitar and Bass Ensemble

Bill Putnam, Sr.

Binary

Binaural

Binding

Binding Post

Binhex

BIOS

Birdseye

Bit

Bit Depth

Bit Mapping

Bitonality

Bitsetting

Bit Splitting

Biwa

Black Burst

Blackburst

Black Panel Amp

Blackwood

Blade Switch

Bleed

Blending

BLER

Blind Transfer

Block

Blu-ray

Blue Book

Bluetooth

Blumlein Microphone (or Blumlein Pair)

BMI

BNC

Bobbin

Body Pack

Bolt-in Neck

Bolt-On Neck

Bone

Bookmark

Bookmatching

Book Type Field

Boom Operator

Boost (and Cut)

Boot

Boot Camp

Bottleneck

Bounce

Bouncing

Boundary Microphone

Bout

Boutique Amp

BPM

bps

Bracing

Braided Shield

Breaker

Breakout/ Breakout Box

Breath Controller

Breathing

Breve

Brian May "Red Special"

Brickwall Filter

Brickwall Limiter

Bridge

Bridge Block

Bridged

Bridge Pin

British EQ

Broadband

Brockburst

Brockburst

Broken Chord

Broken Octave

Brownian Movement/Motion

Brown Sound

Bubinga

Bucking

Buffer

Buffer Amp

Buffer Under-Run

Bug

Bulk Dump/Load

Bullet Truss Rod

Bump (slang)

Burl

Burn

Burn-In

Burns Bison

Burns Bison Bass

Burns Gear-0-Matic

Burns Gear-0-Matic

Burst

Bus

Bus Bar

Bus Power

Buss

Buzz Track

Broadcast Wave File (BWF)

Bypass

Byte

     
Home | Gear Reviews | Videos | Buying Guides | Glossary | Tech Tips | Show Reports | Publications | Featured Articles

Our Customers Say...

My Sales Engineer is not only extremely knowledgeable and kind, but he has been completely professional and responsive. I always rely upon Dave to give me sound advice and support.
Monique Berry, CA

Sweetwater Sound Inc.
5501 U.S. Hwy 30 W
Fort Wayne, IN 46818
Get Directions »

Toll-Free (800) 222-4700
Local (260) 432-8176
Fax (260) 432-1758
E-mail us

Telephone hours:
9-9 Mon-Thu, 9-8 Fri, 9-7 Sat EST

Retail Store hours:
9-8 Mon-Fri, 9-7 Sat EST

HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.

© 2010 Sweetwater Sound Inc. All rights reserved. Please read our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Site Map | Links | Downloads | Press Releases