dyamakuchi
Member
"Switched" connectors:
https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetai...MI8Jju3dHJ8AIVARtlCh1iPwXeEAQYCyABEgJ83_D_BwE
or the one I like for PCBs:
https://www.neutrik.com/en/product/nys216
Crosstalk is traditionally caused by capacitive coupling and should increase with increasing frequency. Usually @ 6dB per octave. It should also be 60~80~100dB down even in a poor design. What you have is probably a design error. A very high impedance node _could_ couple rather strongly through stray capacitance but, again, the coupling will _increase_ with freq...if it's typical "crosstalk."
If it doesn't go away more or less completely at LF what you have might be more accurately called a "fixed pan."
https://www.mouser.com/ProductDetai...MI8Jju3dHJ8AIVARtlCh1iPwXeEAQYCyABEgJ83_D_BwE
or the one I like for PCBs:
https://www.neutrik.com/en/product/nys216
Crosstalk is traditionally caused by capacitive coupling and should increase with increasing frequency. Usually @ 6dB per octave. It should also be 60~80~100dB down even in a poor design. What you have is probably a design error. A very high impedance node _could_ couple rather strongly through stray capacitance but, again, the coupling will _increase_ with freq...if it's typical "crosstalk."
If it doesn't go away more or less completely at LF what you have might be more accurately called a "fixed pan."