Thank you for your comment. As you said, the amount of solder used is a little large. With my camera, the proper amount of solder makes it look thinner and less when photographed. This reply was written using Google Translate.
Thanks for your explanation. In general, I understood that if a cable does not have a ground loop, both ends of the cable are the same. What are the characteristics of cables made this way? I know that the l-4e6s cable is also wired in the same way.
Not everyone has the same idea, but I've experienced that mesh shields can be unreliable. It would be nice to have a very fine mesh, but the work is difficult. Originally, I expect one of the two cores for the balance line as a good quality GND parallel to the hot side. Well, it's my favorite. in addition. .. .. It seems that many 2-core twisted cable (4-wire) products are of good quality.
Thank you for your comment. I always solder the shield mesh. As you pointed out, the coating will melt at the clamp part. I think it would be practical to solder only the wiring holes and tighten the clamp sufficiently. The method is to connect the shield without using solder (crimping), but in the case of the plug and cable combination shown in this video, I think it is not enough to just tighten the clamp. This reply was written using Google Translate.
@@soundmap-Y agree, crimp the shield is not tight enough. if the shield joined together with the ground and soldered at the opposite side of soldering hole, it will be too thick and touch the plug shell.