Three-pin
XLR connectors and quarter-inch (¼" or 6.35mm)
TRS phone connectors are commonly used for balanced audio interfaces. Many jacks are now designed to take either XLR or TRS phone plugs. Equipment intended for long-term installation sometimes uses
terminal strips or
Euroblock connectors. Some balanced headphone connections also use a
Pentaconn 4.4mm
TRRRS connector. Image:trsconnectors.jpg|2.5, 3.5 and 6.35mm TRS phone plugs Image:Xlr-connectors.jpg|Three-pin XLR connectors, female on left and male on right Image:XLR-phone jack combo connector.jpg|Three-pin XLR plus 6.35mm TRS phone hybrid jack. With XLR connectors, pins 1, 2, and 3 are usually used for the shield (ideally connected to the chassis) and the two signal wires, respectively. (The phrase "ground, live, return", corresponding to "X, L, R", is often offered as a memory aid, although the second signal wire is not a "return" in the case of differential signaling) On TRS phone plugs, the tip is signal/non-inverting, the ring is return/inverting, and the sleeve is chassis ground. If a
stereophonic or other
binaural signal is plugged into such a jack, one channel (usually the right) will be subtracted from the other (usually the left), leaving an unlistenable L − R (left minus right) signal instead of normal
monophonic L + R (left plus right). Reversing the
polarity at any other point in a balanced audio system will also result in this effect at some point when it is later mixed-down with its other channel.
Telephone lines also carry audio through balanced circuitry, though this is generally now limited to the
local loop. It is called this because the two wires form a balanced loop through which both sides of the
telephone call travel. As telephones require DC power to operate and to allow simple on/off hook detection, extra circuitry was developed where one signal wire is fed from the exchange power bus, typically −50 volts, and the other grounded, both via equal value inductors which have about 400 ohms DC resistance, to avoid short-circuiting the wanted AC signal and to maintain impedance balance.
Digital audio connections in professional environments are also frequently balanced, normally following the
AES3 (AES/EBU) standard. This uses XLR connectors and twisted-pair cable with 110-ohm impedance. By contrast, the coaxial
S/PDIF interface commonly seen on consumer equipment is unbalanced. ==Converters==