Green RCA-Jack & Jack-RCA
Silver-plated OFC conductors & PTFE insulation, with Neutrik 3.5mm jack and RCAs
The Green is our mid-level audio interconnect. It is a significant upgrade over the standard Grey shielded cable, but more affordable than the Blue cabling system. Its relatively small size and high flexibility makes it ideal for connecting external accessories like laptops, iPods and MP3 players to your main hi-fi. This Jack-RCA cable is designed for exactly this task - it can also be used the other way around, to record music on your PC/laptop from a hi-fi RCA output.
The Green RCA-Jack (or Jack-RCA - the Green cable is non-directional) cable is supplied as a 0.5m cable as standard, with one Neutrik gold plated 3.5mm stereo jack plug at one end and two gold-plated Neutrik RCA plugs at the other end. We can also fit 6.35mm stereo jack plugs to special order. We can also fit jack plugs (or other types of plug) to the RCA end of the cable if desired - just ask for a quote.
Photo to be updated - now upgraded to use Neutrik RCA plugs
£150 including VAT
0.5m cable, 3.5mm
stereo jack plug to
2 x Neutrik RCAs
UPGRADE OPTIONS:
Longer cable:
add £30 per 50cm
6.35mm gold-plated
stereo jack:
add £12
Customer Testimonials
First impressions are very, very good - plenty of openness and clarity with none of the horrible hiss or sibilance that typify some cheaper cables. Using Scarlatti's 'Humanita e Lucifero' as a first test, the work has the scale that it ought to, without becoming strained or bloomy. Testing the Green against a Van den Hul D102 mk. III (RRP £140), the Green gives a full sound, though not with the absolute clarity of the VdH. With the VdH Lucifer is clearly taking centrestage, with all else playing in the background. With the Green, the backing is rounder and more palpable.
With REM’s ‘Losing my Religion’, gone are the subtleties of the previous test piece, replaced by a bass line that dominates. Here the Green is perhaps a little thinner than the VdH, but this works in its favour. While the VdH perhaps picks the vocals out a little better, the Green allows the attention grabbing, vibrant rhythm and bassline to really shine through.
Coming in at a quarter of the price, the Green was never going to stack up against the VdH, nor was it meant to. However, the test certainly showed that the gap was extremely small, and really highlighted the Greens strengths. If your tastes lead you more towards something able to grab a rhythm and get your foot tapping to the bassline,the Green sounds very promising indeed at the price.
Mark (UK)
Further Information
The Green Range uses several cores of silver-plated pure OFC conductor with a PTFE insulation, which is then sheathed in a protective polyurethane tube, the colour of this tube gives its name to the range. This is our middle level of cables, a step above the standard grey shielded cable but at a more affordable price than the top-level Blue interconnect.
We often do away with the outer green tube in order to create multiple-output cables, where you need several separate output cables to enter one single plug. An example of this is the 4 pin XLR socket to 4 x banana plug cables that we make for HE-6 headphone amplifiers - this uses four separate runs of twisted-pair 20AWG silver plated copper wire, which because of their relatively small size can all be connected inside an XLR plug body.
In some cases we will use a green heatshrunk jacket to contain a large number of individual cables, as our green polyurethane jacket is quite small and only available in one size.
The Green cable is much easier to route and handle than the Blue cabling system, which is some cases can make it a better option; for example, with a 3.5mm stereo jack we can create a very nice iPod/MP3 player cable to link it to your main hi-fi, but with the Blue cabling the cable would be impractically stiff and heavy.