Your 3.5mm plug are the plugs that typically go up to 3 rings. these rings are supposedly conductors and it's important they match so they line up properly. Trrs means tip ring ring sleeve and trs means tip ring sleeve. Which, after all my years, today was the first I ever heard of such. This is great insight for anyone else that wasn't aware of the trrs/trs world. So problem solved, and I didn't have to buy another adapter. In my mind, the splitter is also an adapter and it indeed corrected the issue when using it with the 1/4" adapter. The splitter, being made for the 3.5mm trrs plug on the headset, goes down to a 3.5mm trs plug. My guess is it's purpose is to use with a pc, though is not how I use it and is why I had forgotten about it. I had forgotten about the headphone/mic splitter that is included with the Plantronics headset. Hopefully someone can learn from my ignorance as I usually visit Head-Fi to try to become enlightened on various things as they arise. Additionally, I am ignorant to a lot within the audio world, forgive me. In my defense I had been up a very long time when I first started this post. Please advise, I'm trying to avoid sending my dac back. However it seems odd that something as simple as an adapter could be causing this problem, maybe it is the dac, I just don't know.Īre these kind of adapters not all created equal? If the dac is brand new, does it not stand to reason the problem lies within the adapter, but why? Unfortunately I do not have a spare adapter lying around to test this theory. The only way to make the sound come in the way it's suppose to is to stick only the tip of the adapter into the dac port. Moving it, twisting around doesn't change the sound quality. With the adapter plugged in all the way it sounds absolutely terrible. I narrowed the problem down to either the dac headphone output or the adapter itself. Immediately I knew something was wrong with the sound. I just got the dac and adapter brand new. I guess this is the correct thread location for my post.Īnd I'm using it with the SMSL SD-793II DAC.
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