I just picked up this cable tester and went through all of my George L cables. Although all my cables were working, about half of them tested bad, so I clipped the ends And remade them. The cable tester checks both the grounding and the impedance of the cables.
Gordon Hartin wrote:I just picked up this cable tester and went through all of my George L cables. Although all my cables were working, about half of them tested bad, so I clipped the ends And remade them. The cable tester checks both the grounding and the impedance of the cables.
Pretty useful device. Gordon
Sounds about par for the course for those AWFUL solderless connectors. I've had NOTHING but headaches with them.
Gordon Hartin wrote:I just picked up this cable tester and went through all of my George L cables. Although all my cables were working, about half of them tested bad, so I clipped the ends And remade them. The cable tester checks both the grounding and the impedance of the cables.
Pretty useful device.
Gordon
If the cable tests "bad", does the device tell you what the problem is?
I've got a Behringer tester that only shows continuity (or lack thereof). I've found that cables that have been laying around read as glitchy until you either work the dirt/oxidation off with a bit of in/out or a spritz of DeOxit.
I made a box to test resistance. It surprised me to find that nearly all my old GeoL's were reading very high until I clipped and re-made them. It was a night & day difference in readings. I assume that the contacts oxidize and need refreshing (clipping).
The Behringer cable tester is indeed a great design. I considered getting one but couldn't bring myself to do it. The identical Ebtech unit that they used as, um, inspiration, is probably no better functionally, and certainly costs more, but if you want to give the owners of the original design their due, and get a USA-made product, here's a link: