Microphone Cables
Professional Microphone Cables for Stage & Events
When it comes to flawless audio transmission in professional event technology, microphone cables are the invisible backbone of every successful performance. Whether you're setting up a concert stage, equipping a theatre production, or installing a permanent sound system in a club – the quality of your microphone cables directly impacts signal integrity, reliability, and ultimately the audience experience.
At LTT, you'll find a comprehensive range of professional microphone cables engineered for the demanding requirements of live events, touring productions, and fixed installations. From compact 3-metre cables for close-mic applications to robust 30-metre runs for large-scale festival stages, our selection covers every scenario in professional audio distribution. Each cable combines superior shielding technology with durable construction to deliver interference-free signal transmission even in electrically challenging environments.
Our microphone cable range features premium brands including SOMMER CABLE, Neutrik, HICON, Cordial, and Klotz – manufacturers trusted by sound engineers and event technicians worldwide. These cables are built to withstand the rigours of daily touring, frequent coiling and uncoiling, and the mechanical stress of rigging installations, making them the optimal solution for professionals who demand reliability night after night.
What Are Microphone Cables and How Do They Work?
Microphone cables are specialised audio cables designed to transmit low-level electrical signals from microphones to mixing consoles, stage boxes, or audio interfaces. Unlike standard speaker cables or instrument cables, microphone cables employ balanced signal transmission – a sophisticated technique that effectively eliminates electromagnetic interference and radio frequency noise.
The standard configuration uses XLR connectors (also known as Cannon connectors) with three pins: pin 1 for ground/shield, pin 2 for the positive signal conductor (hot), and pin 3 for the negative signal conductor (cold). This three-wire system creates a balanced circuit where any interference picked up along the cable affects both signal conductors equally. When the signal reaches the receiving device, the polarity of one conductor is inverted and combined with the other, causing the interference to cancel out whilst the desired audio signal is reinforced.
Typical professional microphone cables feature a construction of 2 × 0.22 mm² to 2 × 0.34 mm² conductors (AWG 24 to AWG 22), wrapped in a dense copper spiral shield providing 95–99% optical coverage, often supplemented with an aluminium foil layer for additional protection. The outer jacket – usually robust PVC or touring-grade polyurethane – protects against abrasion, moisture, and mechanical damage. Cable capacitance typically ranges from 58 to 90 pF/m (picofarads per metre), with lower values preferred for longer cable runs to preserve high-frequency response.
This differs fundamentally from unbalanced instrument cables (such as standard guitar leads with 6.3 mm jack plugs), which use only two conductors and are far more susceptible to noise over distances beyond 5–6 metres. It also contrasts with speaker cables, which carry high-power signals and require much larger conductor cross-sections (typically 2 × 1.5 mm² or greater) but need no shielding since the signal levels are too high for interference to matter.
Applications in Professional Event Technology
Microphone cables are essential components across virtually every audio application in the event technology sector. On concert stages, they connect vocal microphones, instrument mics, and wireless receiver outputs to stage boxes and mixing positions – often spanning distances of 20 to 50 metres from front-of-house to stage. The balanced XLR connection ensures that even these extended cable runs deliver clean, noise-free audio despite the electrically hostile environment created by lighting dimmers, power distribution, and radio frequency equipment.
In theatre and broadcast applications, microphone cables form the permanent infrastructure connecting wall-mounted XLR panels to central technical areas. Here, cable management becomes critical: proper routing through cable trays, labelling systems, and strain relief at connection points ensure reliable operation over years of continuous use. Many installations employ colour-coded cables or transparent coding rings on XLR connectors for rapid identification during setup and troubleshooting.
Festival and touring productions place extreme demands on microphone cables. Cables must withstand daily coiling and uncoiling, being run over by flight cases, exposure to weather, and the mechanical stress of rapid setup and strike. Touring-grade cables feature reinforced strain relief at the connector junction, highly flexible PVC or polyurethane jackets that remain supple even at low temperatures, and robust metal-bodied XLR connectors – typically Neutrik XX-series or equivalent – that survive thousands of mating cycles.
For corporate events and conferences, microphone cables connect lectern microphones, handheld mics for Q&A sessions, and boundary microphones on conference tables to audio distribution systems. In these applications, aesthetics matter: black cables blend into stage environments, whilst proper cable dressing with gaffer tape or cable ramps maintains a professional appearance and prevents trip hazards.
Multi-Core Systems and Stage Boxes
Large productions often employ multi-core snake cables – thick trunk cables containing 8, 16, 24, or even 48 individually shielded microphone circuits. These connect stage boxes (containing multiple XLR inputs) to the mixing console, dramatically reducing cable clutter and setup time. Understanding how individual microphone cables integrate with these larger distribution systems is essential for designing efficient audio infrastructures.
Quality Standards and Professional Buying Criteria
When specifying microphone cables for professional applications, several technical parameters determine long-term reliability and audio performance. Conductor cross-section is the foundation: whilst 2 × 0.22 mm² (AWG 24) suffices for most applications up to 30 metres, critical installations or very long runs benefit from 2 × 0.25 mm² or 2 × 0.34 mm² conductors, which reduce resistance and maintain signal integrity over extended distances.
Shielding effectiveness directly impacts noise rejection. Premium cables employ dual shielding: an inner layer of aluminium-polyester foil providing 100% coverage against high-frequency interference, plus an outer copper spiral shield (95–99% optical coverage) that handles low-frequency electromagnetic fields. This combination delivers superior performance in environments with intense lighting control systems, wireless transmitters, and mains-powered equipment. Shielding effectiveness is sometimes specified in dB; values above 85 dB indicate excellent rejection of external interference.
Connector quality is equally critical. Neutrik connectors are the industry standard, featuring silver-plated or gold-plated contacts (gold preferred for permanent installations due to superior corrosion resistance), robust die-cast zinc shells, and chuck-type strain relief that grips the cable jacket securely. The XX-series (such as NC3MXX and NC3FXX) offers the best balance of durability and cost-effectiveness for professional touring. HICON connectors provide a cost-effective alternative with similar build quality, whilst brands like Sommer Cable's proprietary connectors are optimised for their specific cable designs.
Manufacturers like SOMMER CABLE offer distinct product lines targeting different applications: their Stage 22 Highflex series (2 × 0.22 mm², 6.4 mm diameter, 68 pF/m capacitance) represents excellent value for general stage use, whilst the SC-Source MKII range (2 × 0.25 mm², OFC copper with 0.05 mm strand diameter, dual shielding) targets demanding studio and broadcast applications where ultimate signal purity matters. Cordial, Klotz, and Schulzkabel similarly segment their ranges by conductor size, shielding density, and jacket material.
Price brackets reflect these quality tiers: budget cables with basic single-layer shielding and standard PVC jackets start around €15–25 for a 10-metre XLR-XLR cable, mid-range touring cables with dual shielding and Neutrik connectors typically cost €35–60 for 10 metres, whilst premium studio-grade cables with OFC (oxygen-free copper) conductors, ultra-low capacitance, and gold-plated connectors can reach €80–120 for the same length. For professional event technology, investing in the mid-to-premium tier ensures cables that deliver reliable performance over years of intensive use.
Cable Length, Signal Loss, and Phantom Power Considerations
Selecting the appropriate cable length involves balancing practical convenience against signal integrity. Whilst balanced microphone cables can theoretically span hundreds of metres without significant loss, real-world factors impose practical limits. Signal attenuation increases with length, particularly affecting high frequencies: a well-designed cable loses approximately 0.1–0.3 dB at 20 kHz over 100 metres, which remains inaudible in most applications but can accumulate in complex signal chains.
More significant is capacitance, which acts as a low-pass filter. Cables with 80 pF/m capacitance exhibit roughly 8 nF (nanofarads) of total capacitance over 100 metres, which begins to roll off frequencies above 15 kHz when driving typical mixing console inputs (10 kΩ impedance). This rarely matters for speech applications but can subtly affect the airiness of high-quality condenser microphones capturing acoustic instruments. For this reason, critical studio applications favour low-capacitance designs (50–65 pF/m) and keep cable runs below 50 metres where possible.
Standard cable lengths in professional event technology include 3 m, 5 m, 10 m, 15 m, 20 m, and 30 m. The 10-metre length represents the sweet spot for most stage applications: long enough to reach from a stage-mounted microphone to a nearby stage box or mixer, yet short enough to minimise clutter and cost. For front-of-house mixing positions 30–50 metres from stage, multi-core snake systems are more practical than individual long microphone cables.
Phantom Power and Cable Quality
Condenser microphones require phantom power – typically 48 V DC supplied by the mixing console and transmitted through the same XLR cable that carries audio. Poor-quality cables with inadequate shielding or high-resistance conductors can cause phantom power voltage drops, leading to reduced microphone sensitivity or increased self-noise. Premium cables with larger conductor cross-sections (2 × 0.34 mm²) and low DC resistance ensure full phantom power delivery even over 50-metre runs.
Cables must also handle the DC current without introducing noise: low-quality shielding can allow phantom power switching transients to couple into the audio path, causing audible pops when microphones are connected. This is why professional installations specify cables with proven phantom power compatibility, particularly for permanent theatre and broadcast systems where microphones remain connected continuously.
Cable Management for Touring
Proper coiling technique extends cable life dramatically. The over-under method – alternating the direction of each loop – prevents the cable from developing a twist memory that leads to kinking and conductor fatigue. Touring professionals typically coil cables to a diameter of 30–40 cm, secure them with Velcro straps (never cable ties, which stress the jacket), and store them in dedicated cable bags or cases. Cables subjected to frequent setup cycles should be inspected regularly for damaged connectors, jacket abrasion, and intermittent connections.
LTT – Your Specialist for Event Technology Cabling
At LTT, we understand that reliable audio infrastructure forms the foundation of every successful event. Our microphone cable range combines proven professional brands with the technical expertise to help you specify the optimal solution for your specific application – whether you're equipping a touring production, installing a permanent venue system, or building your studio infrastructure.
Every microphone cable in our range is backed by our 3-year LTT warranty, reflecting our confidence in the quality and durability of the products we supply. We ship worldwide from our logistics centre in Bocholt, Germany, with free shipping on orders over €69 and express delivery options available when you need cables urgently for an upcoming event. For resellers and installation companies, we offer wholesale pricing and volume discounts on bulk cable orders.
Our 25 years of experience in professional event technology means we can provide expert guidance on cable specification, helping you balance performance requirements against budget constraints. Whether you need a handful of standard 10-metre XLR cables for a small venue or a complete cabling package for a festival stage, our team understands the practical demands of live event production and can recommend solutions that deliver reliable performance night after night.
Beyond microphone cables, LTT supplies the complete spectrum of event technology infrastructure – from truss systems and rigging hardware to lighting control, power distribution, and audio equipment. This integrated approach ensures all components of your technical setup work together seamlessly, backed by consistent quality standards and comprehensive after-sales support.
Specialised Cable Types: DMX Compatibility and Hybrid Solutions
Whilst standard microphone cables use 2-conductor twisted-pair construction optimised for audio frequencies, the event technology sector increasingly demands cables that serve multiple functions. DMX512 lighting control cables, whilst superficially similar to microphone cables (both use XLR connectors), require different electrical characteristics: DMX is a high-speed digital protocol demanding 120 Ω characteristic impedance and low capacitance to maintain signal integrity over long cable runs and through multiple fixtures.
Many professionals ask whether microphone cables can substitute for DMX cables in lighting control applications. The answer is nuanced: whilst a short microphone cable (under 10 metres) connecting a single lighting fixture will usually work, longer runs or complex daisy-chain configurations can cause data errors and intermittent fixture behaviour. Dedicated DMX cables use a specific twisted-pair geometry and impedance-controlled construction that microphone cables lack. For professional installations, always specify proper DMX cable for lighting control to avoid troubleshooting headaches during critical events.
Conversely, hybrid cables combine multiple functions in a single jacket: common configurations include microphone audio pairs bundled with DMX control circuits, or audio pairs combined with mains power conductors. These combo cables reduce cable clutter on complex stages but require careful specification to ensure adequate isolation between high-voltage power circuits and sensitive audio signals. SOMMER CABLE's Monolith series, for example, integrates AES/EBU digital audio, DMX control, and power distribution in ruggedised touring-grade jackets.
Outdoor and Weatherproof Applications
Permanent outdoor installations – such as theme park sound systems, outdoor stages, or architectural audio – demand cables with UV-resistant jackets and moisture-sealed connectors. Whilst standard PVC-jacketed microphone cables withstand occasional outdoor use, continuous UV exposure causes jacket degradation over months. Polyurethane-jacketed cables offer superior weather resistance, remaining flexible across a wider temperature range (-40°C to +80°C versus -20°C to +60°C for PVC) and resisting oil, abrasion, and UV damage.
For underwater applications or extreme-weather installations, specialised cables like SOMMER CABLE's Aqua Marinex series feature aramid fibre reinforcement and waterproof construction, paired with IP67-rated XLR connectors that maintain sealed connections even when submerged. These solutions enable audio distribution in water features, outdoor pools, and marine environments where standard cables would fail within weeks.
FAQ – Questions & Answers
Professional microphone cables are commonly called XLR cables or balanced audio cables, named after the XLR connector standard they use. The term "XLR" derives from the original Cannon Electric connector design (X-series, Locking, Rubber insulation). These cables feature three-pin connectors – one for ground/shield and two for balanced signal transmission – and are the universal standard for connecting microphones to mixing consoles, stage boxes, and audio interfaces in professional event technology, broadcast, and studio applications.
The highest quality XLR microphone cables combine oxygen-free copper (OFC) conductors with ultra-low capacitance (50–65 pF/m), dual shielding (aluminium foil plus dense copper spiral providing 99–100% coverage), and premium connectors with gold-plated contacts. Brands like SOMMER CABLE SC-Source MKII, Cordial premium series, and Klotz high-end models represent professional-grade construction with 2 × 0.25 mm² or larger conductors, touring-grade jackets, and Neutrik XX-series connectors. These cables deliver measurably lower noise floors, superior interference rejection, and exceptional durability for demanding studio and live applications.
The best microphone cable depends on your specific application. For live stage use, choose cables with 2 × 0.22 mm² conductors, robust dual shielding, flexible PVC jackets, and Neutrik XLR connectors – models like SOMMER CABLE Stage 22 Highflex offer excellent durability and value. For studio recording, prioritise low-capacitance designs (under 70 pF/m) with OFC conductors and gold-plated connectors to preserve high-frequency detail. For touring productions, invest in reinforced cables with polyurethane jackets and metal-bodied connectors that withstand daily coiling and mechanical stress. Cable length also matters: use the shortest practical length to minimise signal loss and interference pickup.
An XLR cable is a professional balanced audio cable that transmits microphone signals from the microphone to mixing consoles or audio interfaces whilst rejecting electromagnetic interference. It uses three-pin XLR connectors (male and female) and employs balanced signal transmission: two conductors carry identical audio signals with opposite polarity, whilst a third conductor provides grounding. Any interference picked up along the cable affects both signal conductors equally; when combined at the receiving end with one signal inverted, the interference cancels out whilst the audio signal doubles in strength. This technique enables noise-free transmission over distances of 50 metres or more, making XLR cables essential for professional event technology, broadcast, and studio applications.
Balanced cables (such as XLR microphone cables) use three conductors – two for signal (hot and cold with opposite polarity) and one for ground – enabling interference cancellation through differential signal processing. This allows clean audio transmission over long distances (30–100 metres) even in electrically noisy environments. Unbalanced cables (such as standard guitar leads with 6.3 mm jack plugs) use only two conductors – signal and ground – making them highly susceptible to electromagnetic interference beyond 5–6 metres. Balanced cables are essential for professional microphone applications, whilst unbalanced cables suffice for short instrument connections where high signal levels (line level or instrument level) overcome noise concerns.
Professional balanced microphone cables can run 50–100 metres without audible signal loss, thanks to their low-impedance balanced design and effective shielding. However, practical considerations influence maximum length: cable capacitance accumulates with length (a 100-metre cable with 70 pF/m exhibits 7 nF total capacitance), which can subtly roll off high frequencies above 15 kHz when driving typical mixing console inputs. For critical studio applications with high-quality condenser microphones, keeping runs below 50 metres preserves maximum frequency response. Stage applications routinely use 30-metre cables without issues. Beyond 100 metres, consider using a microphone preamplifier or stage box to convert the signal to line level, which tolerates much longer cable runs.
Standard professional XLR microphone cables handle phantom power (typically 48 V DC) without requiring special construction, as the voltage is transmitted through the same balanced conductors that carry audio. However, cable quality affects phantom power performance: poor-quality cables with high conductor resistance can cause voltage drops, reducing microphone sensitivity, whilst inadequate shielding allows switching transients to create audible pops. For reliable phantom power delivery over long runs (30+ metres), choose cables with larger conductor cross-sections (2 × 0.25 mm² or 2 × 0.34 mm²) and proven shielding effectiveness. Premium cables from manufacturers like SOMMER CABLE, Cordial, and Neutrik ensure full phantom power voltage reaches the microphone without noise or performance degradation.
Whilst microphone cables and DMX cables both use XLR connectors, they are not electrically equivalent. DMX512 lighting control requires cables with 120 Ω characteristic impedance and specific twisted-pair geometry to maintain digital signal integrity, whereas microphone cables are optimised for audio frequencies and typically exhibit 60–90 Ω impedance. Short runs (under 10 metres) connecting a single fixture may work with microphone cable, but longer distances or daisy-chained fixtures often experience data errors and intermittent behaviour. For professional lighting installations, always specify dedicated DMX cable to ensure reliable fixture control. Conversely, DMX cable should not be used for microphone signals, as its different impedance characteristics can affect audio frequency response.