LOTS OF BUTTONS AND PORTS MUST BUY 📝Note: The audio at the table might sound a bit weird because I messed up recording and had to fix it with post processing as best I could. 📝Note 2: Turns out you can also use this device as a make-shift universal audio adapter (Thanks to @ImmortalAbsol for the suggestion). You just have to make sure that in addition to the two cables you want to adapt, that you put another cable connecting to its own port on both sides to complete the continuity I guess, so I used the HDMI cable to connect the 2 HDMI ports since that covers all the connections. Then I plugged a 3.5mm jack into one side for audio in, then an XLR out on the other side, and it worked. There seems to be a very slight degradation in audio quality but it's not super noticeable. This also even works without a battery in it.
I thought the same thing, but it's micro USB so not all that useful these days. Plus I generally don't use public USB ports regardless of whether the cable is charge-only or not. But still a good mention for those that do!
Good point. USB has separate data and power wires. What I do is just not plug in at all on other chargers. I just make sure I have enough of a charge before I leave the house.
At 5:07 from top to bottom -6.5mm TS/TRS Jack: Like a guitar lead -RCA: You all know that one -Din: You may have seen MIDI connectors on old computer sound cards or electronic keyboards -5 Pin XLR: Used for DMX controlled lighting. -Speakon: Used for connecting amplifiers to speakers. Comes in 2 pin and 4 pin varieties. -3 Pin XLR: For microphone connections -Powercon: Is a mains voltage power connector. They're mainly found on professional lighting equipment.
You'll find powercon on a bunch of other things like video wall panels and loudspeakers as well, most of which you would find in a live production setting such as a concert.
Powercon is used quite a bit in showbiz in general. I've seen them not only on lighting equipment, also on active speakers and some even use them to power audio racks.
Powercon is also used on the passive speakers. They provide the powered singnal into passive speakers. It is used on big stages where the output power amplifiers are separate from the speakers. You can have one amplifier for 2 or more speakers.
Powercon is basically just Neutrik's better solution to replace the good old three-prong IEC connector for the AV industry. The lighting side of the AV industry adopted it first but we're starting to see it on video and audio stuff as well ! Pretty neat !
It looks so much more complicated than it really is..... I was thinking it was gonna tell you the quality of the wires, like the Linus video about HDMI cables, but it's just a continuity checker but also for all different connections..... like if you wired an RJ-45 to random wires in an HDMI connector, it would tell you which is connected to which.... I don't think I've ever seen anything like this toy before.... NICE!
@@ThioJoejust make your own media company the size of LMG. There is enough evidence that it's possible. In all seriousness though, that tool looks really fancy and I want it even though I'd have no use for the one that Linus showed or the one that you showed (at least not at the moment)
Indeed it is. At my church, our production team has one, along with our audio engineer because we have to occasionally check the cables and determine why they aren't working, or verify that they are working at all. I've used it several times to check the power and communication cables that we have going to our lights, and it would help me figure out what wire I need to resolder.
Two of those XLR adapters are imbalanced cables. XLR is often used to carry balanced audio, so to plug it into imbalanced interfaces, engineers and cable makers will often bond one of the phases to ground. You can also carry unbalanced stereo over XLR if you hate yourself.
Looks super handy! Specially if your trying to make a cable for weird devices that use existing connectors in... unique ways. - A lot of blood glucose meters don't have a USB port. They use a 3.5mm jack. Using this you could tell how its wired and make your own USB A to 3.5mm jack if you want to have a spare or something.
Honestly, this works for hacking egpus, as the chinese love to use USB 3.0 for pcie 1x, and hdmi for 4x. And they also love never giving pin outs for either use case.
7:05 The Small DIN is just a plug type and it has many uses, one of them is S-Video but also for example PS/2 (that only uses the 6pin variant). It is similar to D-Sub, similar plugs, different pin amounts and different use
Vintage Apple computers (older Macs and the IIgs) equipped with ADB (Apple Desktop Bus) use the same port as S-Video. Saved my high school a bunch of money once by having the Computer Coordinator order S-Video cables instead of Apple ADB cables. We had a bunch of Mac SEs I had refurbished, but we couldn't deploy them due to a surplus of ADB cables with bent pins - no spare good cables. (My SE "test bench" machine had two half-good cables spliced together.) 🤣Ordering Apple cables would've blown our budget to you-know-where, so the request was denied, but when I suggested the Radio Shack Solution, they approved the purchase order.
All you need is a Multimeter. Not only it can test cables but also check super complex circuit boards to fix your electronics, provided you have the knowledge to use it.
Yes, but this is aimed at live shows/event technology. There's no time to fiddle around with the prongs of a Multimeter. You can check a lot of cables in no time with this.
This is made for production, which is a VERY fast paced environment where we deal with literally hundreds of cables. If you need to test a cable out in the field nobody’s got time to mess with a multi meter. Also if you have to test a bunch of audio cables in inventory to weed out the bad ones you’re going to hate life with out this. It’s also common in production to make your own cables and in large batches, so it’s very important to test the wiring then. Another thing too is not all the cables this test are easy to jam the probes into. Testing Micro usb and HDMI is going to be no fun, also back to prosecution those fancy cables at the bottom have the “pins” completely covered. It would be really hard to stick a probe into a PowerCon or Speakon cable and see which pins you’re testing
I have a similar one with a bit less plugs. It's bit more orientiert for event technology. Since I solder all my XLR, TRS cables and crimp my Ethernet cables it is very useful.
This cable checker is great for identifying the pinout of most cables. Two issues: It won't tell you if there's an intermittent problem like other cable checkers will and it won't tell you if a connector shell is connected to any pin(s) inside the connector or not.
@@djdjukic It does, kind of. It won't tell you which end of the cable has the connection to a shell. It would have been better to have a separate pair of LEDs to show which connector had a shell connection. It is unusual to have a rotary selector with only 11 positions, the ones I've seen have 12 positions. Using such a selector would enable a separate shell connection test that would identify which end(s) have the shell connection. Determining the presence or absence of a shell connection is important because sometimes only the female is grounded in 3-pin XLR in order to prevent a local (RF) ground loop and at other times there is no shell connection to prevent anything, such as a ground loop, occurring should the shell come into contact with something else that is grounded. The shell is sometimes used as a second common or ground as well as a pin ground. For example, in aircraft using 5-pin XLRs three of the pins provide two audio channels and a common to the headphones while the other two pins are a balanced microphone connection with the shield connected to the connector shell.
agreed. i'd imagine in the Pro industry they would simply replace cables that don't work or no continuuity. what they don't want is a cable that works most of the time only to stop working or intermittently or poorly during a performance.
@@zodiacfml The problem with that approach is, sometimes you have two cables that look alike and one has one-to-one pin connectivity while the other is intentionally some other configuration. A/V pros usually go to pains to label the non-conventional cables and adapters but there are times when you need to know and even if there are visual indicators, they might be simply a color code applied by someone who isn't available, or you're the one who set it up that way but for whatever reason, you don't remember what the green shrink sleeving was supposed to mean. I own a very similar cable tester more focused on audio and used it primarily when fabricating my own XLR (microphone) cables to make sure I had made the correct solders, and then wiggled the connectors to make sure the lights didn't flicker. Oh, and sorry for the run-on sentences.
Thanks Theo! I do tech work on the side for a community theater and this tester combines a lot of older single purpose ones I have. Much easier to carry just THIS one in the bag.
Another test I recommend is to wiggle each end of the cable when paused on each light to check for intermittent broken wires which might get missed if you just whip through spinning the dial. Also major caveat, Never have equipment plugged into the cables under test. The tester uses a battery (9v?) to run through the wire and light up the led. The 9v could fry sensitive electronics or the device might be putting out a voltage that can fry the tester.
I'll definitely be buying one. The bane of my existence is bad cables that users bring in when setting up and I've got 10 minutes to troubleshoot before events start. Sometimes it's already started before they decide they need help.
Awesome device. Not only it looks cool that makes you buy it, it's quite useful too showing the connections so you know what cable does what. Don't throw cables away, label them.
I’ve had one of these cable testers for years and it’s been useful on many occasions. I’m a musician and used it to test cables at shows or in the studio and it’s saved a LOT of time by finding faulty cables right away.
Man I would love this for USB C, of course would also want an even higher end model with a little LCD to tell you all about Thunderbolt and 100w PD charge and all that. Also the micro USB needs to check the OTG pin connection 😅
That would be so useful for the 1/8" mini jack to composite audio/video RCA plugs that are common with camcorders, portable DVD players, the older Roku and Raspberry PI. They each have different pinouts for L & R audio and video.
The XLR-jack leads vary because XLR is a balanced setup. To wire unbalanced audio to XLR you connect ground and cold (1&3) of the XLR to ground of the other connector and then wire the signal to pin 2. The first lead is a bit naughty as it's connecting left and right together. The second lead uses a stereo jack as a balanced mono connection. The third one is another unbalanced to balanced lead but the signal line is broken.
Yeah, I'm certainly thinking about getting this thing. I've had plenty of cables in my time that I could only test by trying them and an alternate cable with some device to see if it's the cable or the device so a handy tester like that could really just make it more obvious where the problem lies.
Looks like a very handy piece of equipment to have in the toolkit! This unit could also be used to diagnose a cable with an intermittent connection... wiggle the cable while you scan through all the pins until you see the LED flickering on and off.
I did structured cabling for a while. Having a verifier is a MUST! This one is nice because of the variety. Look up network crossover cable just for kicks.
Neat device! 1) Non-data cables are VITAL if you want to charge your device at a location offering charge points but you do NOT want your devices being spied upon or hijacked! 2) Great for determining which Cat-x cables are crossover cables vs straight-through, as well as how they're wired.
I prefer the digital versions that tests all lines at once. I had one with the mechanical switch like yours, and the switch broke from constantly switching because I used it so much (I run an auditorium, so had to test cables before each use).
that thing is awesome, i've literally just put a load of cables through my house for in ceiling speakers, but didn't have a way to test the speakon terminals, just ordered this to do that, thanks
The connections on the sides of XLR connections are SPEAKER line connections which have bass and treble split on two different channels. They are more robust and lock in place. They are used in music events like Woodstock or other festivals.
I bought this yesterday and it was delivered today. Checked out a cable that was giving me issues and determined that the cable was bad. Thanks for the review and keep it up.
Cool box. One thing I consider missing/must have: The option to light up all the diodes at once. When troubleshooting cables, the first thing I will be looking for is "does all pins make connection". Miswired cables occur much less frequently than cables that have broken pins/wires or ones that developed non-connecting spot when wiggled around. Imagine trying to check hdmi cable that makes video green unless its propped with matchbox.
I love these, we had one at my old job, we used pretty much every function of this. I always wished that they added VGA to it, then it would have had everything for our needs
I actually use this exact tester and it's very handy to have. I do A/V work for a theater (not a movie theater) and I make a whole lot of custom 1/4" TRS and XLR cables ourselves.
It's probably for diagnosing audio problems in theatres, festivals or other stage tech stuff. I worked in a theatre for a while and have used all of these cables for carrying audio.
I so wanted this when it popped up, in my works i've needed all those cables tested and two hands on a DMM while balancing the cable on a knee just was not enough.
These are really common in A/V Production. We can deal with literally HUNDREDS of cables. And it’s common to make a lot of cables in house to do testing the wiring is super handy.
Just bought one! Great purchase and it’s seems they now have USB-C tester. This is great to separate my high bandwidth cables from the others. Thanks for the video
I actually made a little DIY one of these. super simple, all you need is to wire a push button and an LED for each pin , then connect all the pin 1s together, then the pin 2s, etc. and when you push the button if the circuit is complete it will light the LED.
I carry Behringer one in my gig bag. These manual ones are ok, but they're also a hassle to use on intermittent issues and pretty large to carry around. The automatic ones (liek the Behringer) tell you immediately if there's a break or short circuit when you wiggle the connectors/cables around. That's gold for saving time :)
I already got a (two piece) RJ45 tester with an auto function. That’s all I currently need. It being two pieces makes testing house wiring a bit easier.
That is really cool, I want to buy this as a gift for my father, as he and I struggle with some cables because they do not seem to work, but their functionality may differ from our purpose. This would help to check which cables are waste and which ones work!
That is the adult version of the board you can buy a toddler full of knobs and switches to keep them busy. Please open this and show the wiring inside. That either has to be complete chaos or a work of pure genius.
Only power USB cables are great when you are out traveling. So when you use public chargers it cant be compromised if someone have been tinkered with the charger usb port you are using.
Keep in mind that this is a continuity tester not a certification tester so if someone wants to certify 10Gbps on a 100ft cat6 cable, it will not do speed test certification. This is just a basic electrical connection tester. Great tool, I got one very similar. Those other connectors next to the XLR ThoJoe is called PowerCon and SpeakOn (both are used in professional audio equipment installations/shows/etc) These testers have all pins that can be purchased in a connector (SpeakOn can go up to 4 pins, the tester has 4 pins per side)
I bought the CT200 rather than the CT-20. Although it doesn't have as wide a variety of connectors, it also checks for intermittent connections (and tells you which pin has the problem) as well as grounding issues, and has a built-in signal generator. It's an invaluable tool for me!
Have they detachable tester! Love it! I look like a god when I bust it out of RV to firgure out my military brothers and sisters cable issues in RV camps
Those are nice but the extra cost of buying the DBX CT-3 was well worth it over this type. It has 2 detachable ends to allow you to go to each end of a cable and not be forced to have both ends of the cable right there. Usually you find a bad cable after it has already been ran.
I have the exact same tester, on the face of the unit there are 2 circular ports coloured black and red (banana plugs). If you have a pair of leads you can test any wire and the unit will make noise and turn on a LED.
I purchased a yellow audio one with the almost same layout 20 years ago. Loved it then and still do now. For any audio engineers here get one, it will save you.
Read the title of the video and thought, this sounds like something I'd say. Watched the video and thought, this looks like something I need, one for home and one for work!
I remember when this channel was trolling tech videos will never forget some of those early videos so funny. Like how to change your pcs oil and your detailed water bottle review.
Thanks for this review! I looks kinda handy, especially to identify different adapters, and it's faster, easier and more reliable than using a meter one pin at a time. There's no way anyone is going to build it for less, unless they have a bunch of spare connectors already lying around from old equipment they can salvage.
I have the previous generation that doesn't have HDMI or USB B and B mini. It's definitely an invaluable tool for cable testing. The banana jacks on the front work as a great continuity tester because it has an audible beep as well as the LED. Just hook up some multimeter probes and you can test the continuity for anything, like PCBs or connected wires... and it's super fast latching. Even faster than my Fluke! Well worth the money.
Joe - what are you doing? You just made me buy TWO of these - one for me and one for my field installer. And it arrived at 5:00 AM this morning. And I've spent the last 30 minutes running around finding cables and testing them for no good reason!
"Ethernet Tester" In server rooms and large offices it's handy to have ethernet cable testers, which are similar to this one but can be phsycally split apart. So for ex. device's part1 goes to server room ethernet cable and device's part2 goes to some office room where the end of that ethernet cable is. Both parts 1+2 have ethernet ports and 10 LEDS.
I have a older and much more expensive version of this. Instead of all those extra connection points, what I have uses rf/coax/bnc connectors and/or ethernet ports, with adapters that plug in to show the pin outs of all sorts of cables. Plus it's also a tone tester with continuity pins for long runs to diagnose cable runs already installed to signal if the connection works and which pins may be shorted if they're not working right or dropping signal. Made by Fluke, inc.
LOL I love that you bought this without having any idea what it does just based on the keywords in the title and the picture 🤣 My favorite part of this is that the tester lets you slide the selector between the different wires. I have a much cheaper ethernet cable tester but it cycles through the wires one by one without you being able to individually pause it or go back without waiting for it to cycle back through. Also you should just make a second side channel where you post whatever you want. Less people would follow it but you could make short videos about side stuff like this I'm sure a decent subset of your fan base would be interested.
This is only a continuity tester. It does not test bandwidth or cable quality, nor does it test transmission cable errors or diagnose distance to problem. Just so everyone knows. Tip: You will get cross wired lights in crossover cables so don't throw that cable away if you are looking for such.
One of the other audio connectors is called speakon, it’s used for connecting PA speakers to amplifiers. The amount of power they carry needs a super beefy cable
As soon as I saw the thumbnail and title I couldn't click fast enough. I just knew my brain would want it too, whatever it was. I wasn't wrong. I want it. I must have thought about making something like this so many times in my telecoms tech career, music listening enthusiasm, guitar playing sessions, etc., etc. I have used and made so many cables, connectors, and adapters over the years. I want it, I want it, as much as the Magic Bus.
I miss the troll content, but I still “thumbs up” the videos and have the bell subscription lol I wish you’d have a second channel just to screw with people again. You were the master. You were the master.
LOTS OF BUTTONS AND PORTS MUST BUY
📝Note: The audio at the table might sound a bit weird because I messed up recording and had to fix it with post processing as best I could.
📝Note 2: Turns out you can also use this device as a make-shift universal audio adapter (Thanks to @ImmortalAbsol for the suggestion). You just have to make sure that in addition to the two cables you want to adapt, that you put another cable connecting to its own port on both sides to complete the continuity I guess, so I used the HDMI cable to connect the 2 HDMI ports since that covers all the connections. Then I plugged a 3.5mm jack into one side for audio in, then an XLR out on the other side, and it worked. There seems to be a very slight degradation in audio quality but it's not super noticeable. This also even works without a battery in it.
wait no comments?
I can't get over the expression 😂
neuron activation
yes
That ADHD sure kicked in🤣🤣
Don't throw out the USB power-only cable. You may want to use it for charging at public charge stations, where the data lines can be set with malware.
Yep, I make these cables myself, I cut the data wires or add switch. These type of cables are very useful.
I thought the same thing, but it's micro USB so not all that useful these days. Plus I generally don't use public USB ports regardless of whether the cable is charge-only or not. But still a good mention for those that do!
Good point. USB has separate data and power wires. What I do is just not plug in at all on other chargers. I just make sure I have enough of a charge before I leave the house.
True but unfortunately it's a MicroUSB which isn't used for much anymore, so I probably wouldn't carry around with me anyway
@@ThioJoe guess you don't deal with Raspberry Pi's then :)
At 5:07 from top to bottom
-6.5mm TS/TRS Jack: Like a guitar lead
-RCA: You all know that one
-Din: You may have seen MIDI connectors on old computer sound cards or electronic keyboards
-5 Pin XLR: Used for DMX controlled lighting.
-Speakon: Used for connecting amplifiers to speakers. Comes in 2 pin and 4 pin varieties.
-3 Pin XLR: For microphone connections
-Powercon: Is a mains voltage power connector. They're mainly found on professional lighting equipment.
You'll find powercon on a bunch of other things like video wall panels and loudspeakers as well, most of which you would find in a live production setting such as a concert.
Powercon is used quite a bit in showbiz in general. I've seen them not only on lighting equipment, also on active speakers and some even use them to power audio racks.
Powercon is also used on the passive speakers. They provide the powered singnal into passive speakers. It is used on big stages where the output power amplifiers are separate from the speakers. You can have one amplifier for 2 or more speakers.
Powercon is basically just Neutrik's better solution to replace the good old three-prong IEC connector for the AV industry. The lighting side of the AV industry adopted it first but we're starting to see it on video and audio stuff as well ! Pretty neat !
@@jaromirandel543 That's Speakon you mean. It looks quite similar to Powercon (and both are from Neutrik), but they are different connectors.
It looks so much more complicated than it really is..... I was thinking it was gonna tell you the quality of the wires, like the Linus video about HDMI cables, but it's just a continuity checker but also for all different connections..... like if you wired an RJ-45 to random wires in an HDMI connector, it would tell you which is connected to which.... I don't think I've ever seen anything like this toy before.... NICE!
I wish I could justify buying that other professional cable tester lol
@@ThioJoejust make your own media company the size of LMG. There is enough evidence that it's possible.
In all seriousness though, that tool looks really fancy and I want it even though I'd have no use for the one that Linus showed or the one that you showed (at least not at the moment)
I have an older one with just cat5 and and audio ports like speakon and powercon for professional audio testing. Not this black unit
JUNK !?!? This is NOT JUNK!! It is an extremely valuable and highly useful piece of diagnostic equipment. If only it had serial and parallel ports! 😁
Serial ports were the bane of my life for many years. I think you can buy a similar tester that does serial testing.
I had a tester for that back in the day
Indeed it is. At my church, our production team has one, along with our audio engineer because we have to occasionally check the cables and determine why they aren't working, or verify that they are working at all. I've used it several times to check the power and communication cables that we have going to our lights, and it would help me figure out what wire I need to resolder.
Junk is stuff you throw away.
Stuff is junk you keep. 🙂
Or you can just build it yourself for 10% of the price..
Did it with a rj45 tester. @@daveys
Two of those XLR adapters are imbalanced cables. XLR is often used to carry balanced audio, so to plug it into imbalanced interfaces, engineers and cable makers will often bond one of the phases to ground.
You can also carry unbalanced stereo over XLR if you hate yourself.
Looks super handy! Specially if your trying to make a cable for weird devices that use existing connectors in... unique ways.
- A lot of blood glucose meters don't have a USB port. They use a 3.5mm jack.
Using this you could tell how its wired and make your own USB A to 3.5mm jack if you want to have a spare or something.
Calculators never use normal USB generally, instead they tend to also use a 3.5mm jack and cable.
Honestly, this works for hacking egpus, as the chinese love to use USB 3.0 for pcie 1x, and hdmi for 4x.
And they also love never giving pin outs for either use case.
of course!!!!! more vids like this please! you never know something might come in clutch for someone else
I agree
I love this, it's just you talking about/showing off a nerdy thing you discovered and clearly enjoy a lot!
7:05 The Small DIN is just a plug type and it has many uses, one of them is S-Video but also for example PS/2 (that only uses the 6pin variant). It is similar to D-Sub, similar plugs, different pin amounts and different use
Yeah the dsub was compatible with the pc serial port and some older consoles joysticks...
Vintage Apple computers (older Macs and the IIgs) equipped with ADB (Apple Desktop Bus) use the same port as S-Video.
Saved my high school a bunch of money once by having the Computer Coordinator order S-Video cables instead of Apple ADB cables. We had a bunch of Mac SEs I had refurbished, but we couldn't deploy them due to a surplus of ADB cables with bent pins - no spare good cables. (My SE "test bench" machine had two half-good cables spliced together.) 🤣Ordering Apple cables would've blown our budget to you-know-where, so the request was denied, but when I suggested the Radio Shack Solution, they approved the purchase order.
All you need is a Multimeter. Not only it can test cables but also check super complex circuit boards to fix your electronics, provided you have the knowledge to use it.
Yes, but this is aimed at live shows/event technology. There's no time to fiddle around with the prongs of a Multimeter. You can check a lot of cables in no time with this.
@@user0000user True, I agree.
Not to mention using a multimeter on small pin connectors like Cat5 is not practical.
This is made for production, which is a VERY fast paced environment where we deal with literally hundreds of cables. If you need to test a cable out in the field nobody’s got time to mess with a multi meter. Also if you have to test a bunch of audio cables in inventory to weed out the bad ones you’re going to hate life with out this. It’s also common in production to make your own cables and in large batches, so it’s very important to test the wiring then.
Another thing too is not all the cables this test are easy to jam the probes into. Testing Micro usb and HDMI is going to be no fun, also back to prosecution those fancy cables at the bottom have the “pins” completely covered. It would be really hard to stick a probe into a PowerCon or Speakon cable and see which pins you’re testing
id like to see how to test an usb-c cable with a multimeter
I have a similar one with a bit less plugs. It's bit more orientiert for event technology. Since I solder all my XLR, TRS cables and crimp my Ethernet cables it is very useful.
This cable checker is great for identifying the pinout of most cables. Two issues: It won't tell you if there's an intermittent problem like other cable checkers will and it won't tell you if a connector shell is connected to any pin(s) inside the connector or not.
It will do the second thing: 2:28
@@djdjukic It does, kind of. It won't tell you which end of the cable has the connection to a shell. It would have been better to have a separate pair of LEDs to show which connector had a shell connection. It is unusual to have a rotary selector with only 11 positions, the ones I've seen have 12 positions. Using such a selector would enable a separate shell connection test that would identify which end(s) have the shell connection.
Determining the presence or absence of a shell connection is important because sometimes only the female is grounded in 3-pin XLR in order to prevent a local (RF) ground loop and at other times there is no shell connection to prevent anything, such as a ground loop, occurring should the shell come into contact with something else that is grounded. The shell is sometimes used as a second common or ground as well as a pin ground. For example, in aircraft using 5-pin XLRs three of the pins provide two audio channels and a common to the headphones while the other two pins are a balanced microphone connection with the shield connected to the connector shell.
agreed. i'd imagine in the Pro industry they would simply replace cables that don't work or no continuuity. what they don't want is a cable that works most of the time only to stop working or intermittently or poorly during a performance.
What's wrong with the "wiggle it" test on each switch pos'n?
@@zodiacfml The problem with that approach is, sometimes you have two cables that look alike and one has one-to-one pin connectivity while the other is intentionally some other configuration. A/V pros usually go to pains to label the non-conventional cables and adapters but there are times when you need to know and even if there are visual indicators, they might be simply a color code applied by someone who isn't available, or you're the one who set it up that way but for whatever reason, you don't remember what the green shrink sleeving was supposed to mean. I own a very similar cable tester more focused on audio and used it primarily when fabricating my own XLR (microphone) cables to make sure I had made the correct solders, and then wiggled the connectors to make sure the lights didn't flicker. Oh, and sorry for the run-on sentences.
Thanks Theo! I do tech work on the side for a community theater and this tester combines a lot of older single purpose ones I have. Much easier to carry just THIS one in the bag.
Another test I recommend is to wiggle each end of the cable when paused on each light to check for intermittent broken wires which might get missed if you just whip through spinning the dial.
Also major caveat, Never have equipment plugged into the cables under test. The tester uses a battery (9v?) to run through the wire and light up the led. The 9v could fry sensitive electronics or the device might be putting out a voltage that can fry the tester.
Robots like me need this toy to be included on our Christmas list.
I'll definitely be buying one. The bane of my existence is bad cables that users bring in when setting up and I've got 10 minutes to troubleshoot before events start. Sometimes it's already started before they decide they need help.
If you think about it, the brain forces you to do a lot of things.
Good point
Eat...
Awesome device. Not only it looks cool that makes you buy it, it's quite useful too showing the connections so you know what cable does what. Don't throw cables away, label them.
I love chunky clicky switches, so satisfying to use and feels like you're turning the knob on something industrial.
only OGs remember when this video's title was "I Bought it Before I Even Knew What It Did"
exactly
Yeah
I’ve had one of these cable testers for years and it’s been useful on many occasions. I’m a musician and used it to test cables at shows or in the studio and it’s saved a LOT of time by finding faulty cables right away.
Man I would love this for USB C, of course would also want an even higher end model with a little LCD to tell you all about Thunderbolt and 100w PD charge and all that. Also the micro USB needs to check the OTG pin connection 😅
That would be so useful for the 1/8" mini jack to composite audio/video RCA plugs that are common with camcorders, portable DVD players, the older Roku and Raspberry PI. They each have different pinouts for L & R audio and video.
going by the chart on the back, it only suports TRS 1/8", not TRRS, so you'd have to find a different one I'd wager
Absolutely a keeper. Especially when you found out about the charging online cable, it just proved its value in real time.
yes! more cool gear examples!
The XLR-jack leads vary because XLR is a balanced setup. To wire unbalanced audio to XLR you connect ground and cold (1&3) of the XLR to ground of the other connector and then wire the signal to pin 2. The first lead is a bit naughty as it's connecting left and right together.
The second lead uses a stereo jack as a balanced mono connection.
The third one is another unbalanced to balanced lead but the signal line is broken.
Hi ThioJoe. What an incredible machine! I would love to see more videos like this.
Perfect Xmas to self to clean closet of misc cables. Thanks.
I love this device! It's like a fidget spinner, but useful!
Yeah, I'm certainly thinking about getting this thing. I've had plenty of cables in my time that I could only test by trying them and an alternate cable with some device to see if it's the cable or the device so a handy tester like that could really just make it more obvious where the problem lies.
No review is complete without a non-destructive teardown.
Don't turn it on, take it apart
Looks like a very handy piece of equipment to have in the toolkit!
This unit could also be used to diagnose a cable with an intermittent connection... wiggle the cable while you scan through all the pins until you see the LED flickering on and off.
I did structured cabling for a while. Having a verifier is a MUST!
This one is nice because of the variety.
Look up network crossover cable just for kicks.
Neat device!
1) Non-data cables are VITAL if you want to charge your device at a location offering charge points but you do NOT want your devices being spied upon or hijacked!
2) Great for determining which Cat-x cables are crossover cables vs straight-through, as well as how they're wired.
I prefer the digital versions that tests all lines at once. I had one with the mechanical switch like yours, and the switch broke from constantly switching because I used it so much (I run an auditorium, so had to test cables before each use).
2:53 OH MY GOSH I AGREE SO MUCH
that thing is awesome, i've literally just put a load of cables through my house for in ceiling speakers, but didn't have a way to test the speakon terminals, just ordered this to do that, thanks
The connections on the sides of XLR connections are SPEAKER line connections which have bass and treble split on two different channels. They are more robust and lock in place. They are used in music events like Woodstock or other festivals.
I bought this yesterday and it was delivered today. Checked out a cable that was giving me issues and determined that the cable was bad. Thanks for the review and keep it up.
Cool box.
One thing I consider missing/must have: The option to light up all the diodes at once.
When troubleshooting cables, the first thing I will be looking for is "does all pins make connection". Miswired cables occur much less frequently than cables that have broken pins/wires or ones that developed non-connecting spot when wiggled around. Imagine trying to check hdmi cable that makes video green unless its propped with matchbox.
This would actually be a device that I'd buy if I still did A/V installations.
Looks like a great tool to have & has diverse functionality.
0:09 woah big machine lots of buttons! was my favorite part!😂
This thing looks just like a vintage synthesiser
Yes please more product spotlight stuff!
I never knew about this device, but it looks very straightforward and useful for so many things I do. I've added it to my wishlist!
I love these, we had one at my old job, we used pretty much every function of this. I always wished that they added VGA to it, then it would have had everything for our needs
I actually use this exact tester and it's very handy to have. I do A/V work for a theater (not a movie theater) and I make a whole lot of custom 1/4" TRS and XLR cables ourselves.
It's probably for diagnosing audio problems in theatres, festivals or other stage tech stuff. I worked in a theatre for a while and have used all of these cables for carrying audio.
That's a good machine... And has lights too!!
I so wanted this when it popped up, in my works i've needed all those cables tested and two hands on a DMM while balancing the cable on a knee just was not enough.
These are really common in A/V Production. We can deal with literally HUNDREDS of cables. And it’s common to make a lot of cables in house to do testing the wiring is super handy.
Just bought one! Great purchase and it’s seems they now have USB-C tester. This is great to separate my high bandwidth cables from the others. Thanks for the video
Cool gadget. I'll wait for the updated release that includes USB-C ...
I actually made a little DIY one of these. super simple, all you need is to wire a push button and an LED for each pin , then connect all the pin 1s together, then the pin 2s, etc. and when you push the button if the circuit is complete it will light the LED.
I used one of these before when I put new connectors on speakon cables. Very very useful, saved me a lot of time.
Please do more videos like this. It is good to learn about useful gadgets.
I carry Behringer one in my gig bag. These manual ones are ok, but they're also a hassle to use on intermittent issues and pretty large to carry around.
The automatic ones (liek the Behringer) tell you immediately if there's a break or short circuit when you wiggle the connectors/cables around. That's gold for saving time :)
I already got a (two piece) RJ45 tester with an auto function. That’s all I currently need.
It being two pieces makes testing house wiring a bit easier.
Love this thing, Have used it so much for audio/network and multimedia cable testing over the years. Nice Video
That is really cool, I want to buy this as a gift for my father, as he and I struggle with some cables because they do not seem to work, but their functionality may differ from our purpose. This would help to check which cables are waste and which ones work!
That is the adult version of the board you can buy a toddler full of knobs and switches to keep them busy. Please open this and show the wiring inside. That either has to be complete chaos or a work of pure genius.
Only power USB cables are great when you are out traveling. So when you use public chargers it cant be compromised if someone have been tinkered with the charger usb port you are using.
the original title: "I Bought it Before I Even Knew What it Did"
Keep in mind that this is a continuity tester not a certification tester so if someone wants to certify 10Gbps on a 100ft cat6 cable, it will not do speed test certification. This is just a basic electrical connection tester. Great tool, I got one very similar. Those other connectors next to the XLR ThoJoe is called PowerCon and SpeakOn (both are used in professional audio equipment installations/shows/etc) These testers have all pins that can be purchased in a connector (SpeakOn can go up to 4 pins, the tester has 4 pins per side)
0:59 Did you use some sort of vocal enhancer for this section? The audio sounds kind of low quality and your breathing is distorted.
I bought the CT200 rather than the CT-20. Although it doesn't have as wide a variety of connectors, it also checks for intermittent connections (and tells you which pin has the problem) as well as grounding issues, and has a built-in signal generator. It's an invaluable tool for me!
Have they detachable tester! Love it! I look like a god when I bust it out of RV to firgure out my military brothers and sisters cable issues in RV camps
I love cool junk, 100% would wanna see more
Those are nice but the extra cost of buying the DBX CT-3 was well worth it over this type. It has 2 detachable ends to allow you to go to each end of a cable and not be forced to have both ends of the cable right there. Usually you find a bad cable after it has already been ran.
0:08 This made me laugh today. Thanks Joe
The design of that screams "this was built for use in theaters/venues" and the XLR plugs confirm it.
The looks are just amazing it says tech on every side looks cools as hech you did it right.
Amazing! Need to get one and go through my bins of cables! Thank you for showing me this+
I have the exact same tester, on the face of the unit there are 2 circular ports coloured black and red (banana plugs). If you have a pair of leads you can test any wire and the unit will make noise and turn on a LED.
I purchased a yellow audio one with the almost same layout 20 years ago. Loved it then and still do now. For any audio engineers here get one, it will save you.
This is so fucking cool. Wish it had USB-C. Would be really impressive if it could test fiber.
Please watch your language!
Definitely Liked this product....!!!
Read the title of the video and thought, this sounds like something I'd say. Watched the video and thought, this looks like something I need, one for home and one for work!
I remember when this channel was trolling tech videos will never forget some of those early videos so funny. Like how to change your pcs oil and your detailed water bottle review.
I’ve thought about buying these several times. Really nice to get a cable verified for at least getting the basics right.
Thanks for this review! I looks kinda handy, especially to identify different adapters, and it's faster, easier and more reliable than using a meter one pin at a time. There's no way anyone is going to build it for less, unless they have a bunch of spare connectors already lying around from old equipment they can salvage.
That's a pretty cool device. It'll be even better with connections like Lightning and USB-C, but still it looks so useful
I have the previous generation that doesn't have HDMI or USB B and B mini. It's definitely an invaluable tool for cable testing. The banana jacks on the front work as a great continuity tester because it has an audible beep as well as the LED. Just hook up some multimeter probes and you can test the continuity for anything, like PCBs or connected wires... and it's super fast latching. Even faster than my Fluke! Well worth the money.
Joe - what are you doing? You just made me buy TWO of these - one for me and one for my field installer. And it arrived at 5:00 AM this morning. And I've spent the last 30 minutes running around finding cables and testing them for no good reason!
what a great device!!! added to wish list for later impulse purchasing :)
Thanks for sharing (y)
Been using these type things for years. Best thing ever to add to the tool bag for an audio guy
i giggled at big machines, a lot of buttons 😂
Noticed that its also great for testing crossover cables when that was a thing. Great tool!
"Ethernet Tester"
In server rooms and large offices it's handy to have ethernet cable testers, which are similar to this one but can be phsycally split apart. So for ex. device's part1 goes to server room ethernet cable and device's part2 goes to some office room where the end of that ethernet cable is. Both parts 1+2 have ethernet ports and 10 LEDS.
I have a older and much more expensive version of this. Instead of all those extra connection points, what I have uses rf/coax/bnc connectors and/or ethernet ports, with adapters that plug in to show the pin outs of all sorts of cables. Plus it's also a tone tester with continuity pins for long runs to diagnose cable runs already installed to signal if the connection works and which pins may be shorted if they're not working right or dropping signal. Made by Fluke, inc.
LOL I love that you bought this without having any idea what it does just based on the keywords in the title and the picture 🤣
My favorite part of this is that the tester lets you slide the selector between the different wires. I have a much cheaper ethernet cable tester but it cycles through the wires one by one without you being able to individually pause it or go back without waiting for it to cycle back through.
Also you should just make a second side channel where you post whatever you want. Less people would follow it but you could make short videos about side stuff like this I'm sure a decent subset of your fan base would be interested.
hell yeah, do more of those!!
I love this kind of cool devices
This is only a continuity tester. It does not test bandwidth or cable quality, nor does it test transmission cable errors or diagnose distance to problem. Just so everyone knows.
Tip: You will get cross wired lights in crossover cables so don't throw that cable away if you are looking for such.
Very nice cable tester box. Not too expensive. Especially if we/I have a need to determine similar cables are good or faulty. Great. Thanks.
One of the other audio connectors is called speakon, it’s used for connecting PA speakers to amplifiers. The amount of power they carry needs a super beefy cable
As soon as I saw the thumbnail and title I couldn't click fast enough. I just knew my brain would want it too, whatever it was. I wasn't wrong. I want it. I must have thought about making something like this so many times in my telecoms tech career, music listening enthusiasm, guitar playing sessions, etc., etc. I have used and made so many cables, connectors, and adapters over the years. I want it, I want it, as much as the Magic Bus.
I miss the troll content, but I still “thumbs up” the videos and have the bell subscription lol
I wish you’d have a second channel just to screw with people again. You were the master.
You were the master.
Super informative!! I also am hovering over my screen looking for these things. Could have saved me a "smoke event" just about 3 weeks ago!!
awesome tester, I'll have to hop onto Amazon and order one! 😀