Audio Interfaces
Compared to video, audio comes in a bewildering variety of signal types, levels, and connectors. With video, it's pretty clear how to connect things, and you'll see right away when you've made a mistake, but audio is more complex. Often, two bits of equipment won't have the same types of connectors, and seemingly simple connections may be plagued with hums, buzzes, noise, or distortion.

Analog Audio
Analog audio comes in two flavors: line-level and mic-level. Line level is further subdivided into high-level, "professional" audio and low-level, "consumer" audio.
Analog Audio Interfaces at a Glance | ||
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Name(s) | Connectors | Comments |
Line level (pro, +4dBm) | XLR, ¼" phone | Usually balanced, at least with XLRs |
Line level (consumer, 10dBm) | RCA, 1/8" stereo miniplug | Usually unbalanced |
Mic level | XLR, ¼" phone, 1/8" miniplug; specialty connectors used on some wireless mics | XLRs balanced, others unbalanced |
Headphones | ¼" phone or 1/8" miniplug | Variable level; can use as line-level outputs in a pinch, but headphone amplifier often adds noise |
Line Level
decibels , see www.sizes.com/units/decibel or http://experts.about.com/q/1356/2442821.Balanced lines use three conductors: two conductors for the signal and one for a separate shield. The signal conductors are twisted together to reduce pickup of interference and noise and connect inside equipment in such a way that any noise common to both lines cancels itself out.Two-conductor plugs carry unbalanced signals. Three-conductor plugs carry balanced signals (or two channels of unbalanced audio and a common ground, as with headphone plugs and stereo minijacks). ¼-inch phone plugs and 1/8-inch miniplugs come in both flavors: two conductors, called tip and sleeve, and three conductors called tip, ring, and sleeve. XLR connectors are solid and robust; they lock firmly in place and provide clean and noise-free connections. You'll find XLRs (also called Cannon connectors) on most pro audio and pro video equipment.¼-inch phone plugs are more common on musical instruments, sound reinforcement gear, and audio mixers oriented towards musicians or where space is at a premium.If a piece of gear has a "line" connector with an XLR or phone plug, it's almost always a high-level, +4 dBm connection, although sometimes it may be switchable to low-level.
The XLR inputs on this Digital Betacam deck allow selection of high or low levels as well as 600-ohm termination for audio sources that need it.[View full size image]

Mic Level
Microphone audio has a nominal level of around 50 dBm, give or take a few decibels. Mic connections can appear as XLRs on professional gear, ¼-inch phone plugs on musical equipment, or 1/8-inch miniplugs on consumer gear. In the latter case, the connection is often for a stereo mic; the plug has three conductors instead of the two used for a monophonic mic. (You can get mono-to-stereo adapters to plug a mono mic into a stereo jack and get the same signal on both channels.)[View full size image]

Headphones
You'll also encounter headphone outputs on phone plug and miniplug connections. These may be two-conductor, monophonic signals, but usually they're stereo with three conductors. Their nominal levels are variable, but are usually close to the 10 dBm line level; in a pinch, you can use a headphone output as a substitute for a low-level line output, but be warned that the quality of headphones outputs is usually much lower than the quality of line outputs.
Interfacing Analog Audio
clipping and distortion, even with the input gain turned way down. At the very least, you should use a pad or attenuator , a small inline adapter that cuts down the strong signal to an appropriate level for the low-level input. (Sometimes these are referred to as baluns , because they also adapt from the balanced line of the professional side to the unbalanced line of the consumer side, though many baluns simply convert between balanced and unbalanced without changing levels.)

Digital Audio
Digital Audio Interfaces at a Glance | ||
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Name(s) | Connectors | Comments |
AES/EBU, AES3 | BNC (75 ohm), XLR (110 ohm) | 2-channels per connector; Pro gear |
S/PDIF | RCA (copper), TOSlink (optical) | Carries either AES/EBU 2-channel or Dolby AC3 5.1 audio; G5s, DVD players, home theater, etc. |