Terminating a cable with a metallic braid

Matt1

Mar 18, 2006
3
Joined
Mar 18, 2006
Messages
3
Hi, I'm just wondering if any of you know why you must take caution when terminating a cable with a metallic braid.

Thanks

 

audioguru2

Apr 6, 2004
12,026
Joined
Apr 6, 2004
Messages
12,026
Hi Matt,
Welcome to our forum. ;D
I don't understand what is a metallic braid. What is the metallic braid's function? Do you mean a shielded audio cable?

 

Matt1

Mar 18, 2006
3
Joined
Mar 18, 2006
Messages
3
I believe a metallic braid is used to bind all the strands together in a multistrand cable.

Cheers

 

windoze killa

Mar 4, 2006
136
Joined
Mar 4, 2006
Messages
136
The metalic braid you are refering to is the shield of the cable and is generally connected to earth or ground. If you are talking about a cable designed for audio then you can comb the strands out and twist them together. This and the centre conductor form an un-balanced cable. You terminate it in what ever way is required in the circuit.

Now, if the cable is an RF cable then it is a slightly different matter. The metalic braid is still a shield and is always connected to ground and is also an unbalanced cable. BUT, because of the frequency of the signal the impedence of the cable and any termination will affect the amount of signal that is passed (this is also true about the audio cable but is less critical). As such any termination must be very good and the use of specific connectors is required.

Also as I have called these unbalanced cables I guess I should explain what this is. An unbalanced cable implies that the 2 conductors are at different potentials and the shield is nearly always at gound potential. A balanced cable implies that the 2 conductors are balanced and at the same potential. Although a balanced cable doesn't have a shield they still do not radiate as much as one would expect. This is because the current flow in each conductor (when terminated in the cables characteristic impedence) is equal and opposite and tends to cancel the radiation.

WOW. Now that hurts the memory cells. I could go a lot deeper but I will avoid that for now.

More than willing to continue if anyone would like.

 

indulis

Nov 21, 2005
488
Joined
Nov 21, 2005
Messages
488
And don't forget about a "driven guard" and don't connect both ends of the shield drain wires in certain app's where EMI/RFI could be an issue, only connect one end.

 
Top