Pop the hood on a few different preamps that are not balanced units
By that do you mean a preamp that's not fully balanced, but that does have balanced XLR outputs?
look at how the XLR connections are ran to the unit,on most unbalaced units they are tied directly into the same green board as the RCA inputs
Well, just because the XLR connector interfaces with the same PCBA as the RCA connectors doesn't mean that it's not balanced. We'd have to consider how the three pins of the XLR jack are connected. There are three connectors: +, -, ground (aka HOT, COLD and GROUND). Are you thinking that they just tied COLD to GROUND?
on balanced units they are not tied into the same green board & connect to the amplifier seperately.
I could see that a fully balanced design would have different connection points for the balanced connectors (XLR) when compared to the single-ended connectors (RCA).
I may be missing something here but on my unbalanced units this is the way the XLR's are incorporated,also ,to me it would seem that if the XLR' are sharing the same connection point as the RCA connections then any benifit of running XLR stops at the back of the amplifier.
We'll I'd really expect the HOT lead of the XLR connector to be identical to that of the HOT of the RCA connector. I would expect them to tie it to the same output as the RCA, or very closely, perhaps through some type of buffer. They then have to implement the
inverse of the HOT (which becomes the COLD) for the XLR connector. That's not hard to do, and will almost certainly be done on the same PCBA, very near the output stage.
It's hard to tell what a circuit is doing just from looking at the board and the jacks. The best way to ensure that a device is indeed using balanced signalling is to measure the pins at the output of the preamp. There should be signal present at pins 2 and 3, and pin 1 should be ground.
If you have a preamp that measures no signal at pin 3 (COLD) while there is signal at pin 2 (HOT), the you are not using balanced signalling, even though the connector affords three conductors. That's pretty much the way it would have to be set up to cause it to be single-ended. Anything on pin 3 other than the inverse of pin 2 will drastically muck up the signal, and therefore the final audio.
If you run into this condition, and the manufacturer has stated that it's a "balanced output," then they are just flat-out lying. If you know of one that definitely doesn't output on pins 2 and 3, let me know, I'd be interested to look it up.
As far as I can tell, the Integra link provided above describes a balanced signalling scheme. Just because the specs don't call out info for balanced and single-ended connections doesn't mean it's not balanced. I just looked at my old Outlaw 990 manual and it doesn't state anything about the balanced or XLR connections in the specs. The manual for the Cary Cinema 11 somewhat sloppily calls out some differences for the XLR connectors, though. I know both of these preamps are single-ended designs (i.e., they are not fully balanced throuhgout) using balanced outputs, so it's rather up to the manufacturer how well they specify the information for their preamps in their specs.
If im off base here please correct me.
Well, I'm not saying it's impossible that anyone's ever done this, but I just think it'd be kind of weird. If a company is stating that they have balanced inputs or outputs, then the three wire XLR cable had better have two signals (one the inverse of the other) and a ground. If you know of any preamp that's not doing this, but that has XLR connectors, please let me know.
Have a good day!