Ctrl4Smilerz Well-known member Mar 2, 2023 #1 I got a bunch of these innie jacks that only have two leads. Can anyone help me figure out which is the cathode and which is the anode? TIA
I got a bunch of these innie jacks that only have two leads. Can anyone help me figure out which is the cathode and which is the anode? TIA
A almondcity Well-known member Mar 2, 2023 #2 If you have a multimeter you can check for continuity or sometimes you can look at it and tell which connects to the negative pin on the outside On the lumberg style ones the longer lug is positive
If you have a multimeter you can check for continuity or sometimes you can look at it and tell which connects to the negative pin on the outside On the lumberg style ones the longer lug is positive
Robert Reverse Engineer Mar 2, 2023 #4 The longer lug is usually the sleeve, short lug is the center pin. So for a typical negative ground / negative center wired effect (most modern effects) the longer lead is the positive terminal. You can verify with a continuity test using your DMM, there have been a few cases where they were opposite.
The longer lug is usually the sleeve, short lug is the center pin. So for a typical negative ground / negative center wired effect (most modern effects) the longer lead is the positive terminal. You can verify with a continuity test using your DMM, there have been a few cases where they were opposite.
KR Sound Well-known member Mar 2, 2023 #5 Ya, long is pos and short is neg. You can look into the jack and see how the center pin connects to the shorter leg.
Ya, long is pos and short is neg. You can look into the jack and see how the center pin connects to the shorter leg.
Ctrl4Smilerz Well-known member Mar 2, 2023 #6 Robert said: The longer lug is usually the sleeve, short lug is the center pin. So for a typical negative ground / negative center wired effect (most modern effects) the longer lead is the positive terminal. You can verify with a continuity test using your DMM, there have been a few cases where they were opposite. Click to expand... Well looks like I got one of weird ones. With it plugged into a center negative 9V power supply, in continuity mode my DMM beeps when the input (+) is on the shorter leg.
Robert said: The longer lug is usually the sleeve, short lug is the center pin. So for a typical negative ground / negative center wired effect (most modern effects) the longer lead is the positive terminal. You can verify with a continuity test using your DMM, there have been a few cases where they were opposite. Click to expand... Well looks like I got one of weird ones. With it plugged into a center negative 9V power supply, in continuity mode my DMM beeps when the input (+) is on the shorter leg.
Ctrl4Smilerz Well-known member Mar 2, 2023 #7 almondcity said: If you have a multimeter you can check for continuity or sometimes you can look at it and tell which connects to the negative pin on the outside On the lumberg style ones the longer lug is positive Click to expand... Thanks! That did the trick
almondcity said: If you have a multimeter you can check for continuity or sometimes you can look at it and tell which connects to the negative pin on the outside On the lumberg style ones the longer lug is positive Click to expand... Thanks! That did the trick
Robert Reverse Engineer Mar 2, 2023 #8 Don't measure continuity with power applied, that's giving a false reading. Measure continuity from the lug to the center pin of the jack with nothing plugged in.
Don't measure continuity with power applied, that's giving a false reading. Measure continuity from the lug to the center pin of the jack with nothing plugged in.
PapaBear Well-known member Mar 2, 2023 #9 If it's a Lumberg long is positive short is negative, if it's a knock off throw them away and buy real Lumbergs!
If it's a Lumberg long is positive short is negative, if it's a knock off throw them away and buy real Lumbergs!
Ctrl4Smilerz Well-known member Mar 3, 2023 #10 Robert said: Don't measure continuity with power applied, that's giving a false reading. Measure continuity from the lug to the center pin of the jack with nothing plugged in. Click to expand... Just checked and there is continuity between the center pin and the short leg. Thanks for your help!
Robert said: Don't measure continuity with power applied, that's giving a false reading. Measure continuity from the lug to the center pin of the jack with nothing plugged in. Click to expand... Just checked and there is continuity between the center pin and the short leg. Thanks for your help!