This would of course short circuit the Negative side of the balanced signal to ground.
I'd think most interfaces would be designed to tolerate this. No?
I ask because I have an M-Audio Profire 610 that I've connected this way and after a few months of this, that output is having some issues. It's both channels of the stereo out that are having issues as well as the headphones out for channels 1+2 out. I'd think the actual outputs would have different opamps than the headphones, which makes me think it's further upstream and not the output opamps that have been damaged. Of course it's hard to know. But back to the question, wouldn't most manufacturers design the opamp out circuits to handle shorting half of the balanced signal out when someone (perhaps technically incorrectly) uses a regular 1/4" jack?
I'd think most interfaces would be designed to tolerate this. No?
I ask because I have an M-Audio Profire 610 that I've connected this way and after a few months of this, that output is having some issues. It's both channels of the stereo out that are having issues as well as the headphones out for channels 1+2 out. I'd think the actual outputs would have different opamps than the headphones, which makes me think it's further upstream and not the output opamps that have been damaged. Of course it's hard to know. But back to the question, wouldn't most manufacturers design the opamp out circuits to handle shorting half of the balanced signal out when someone (perhaps technically incorrectly) uses a regular 1/4" jack?