Welcome To The Nightmare: Cable Management Suffering & Their Solutions

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Goatlord
TGF Recording Artist
Messages
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Didn't know where to put this, as cable management is a lifelong concern and issue
whether on the stage, at home, or in the studio. :idk

So what are some tips and tricks? Have any cool solutions? Any cool products that
can tame the Hydra of snaking cables everywhere.... sucking the life and comfort
out of our existence??

I spent this Winter emptying out my music space, and am in the process of putting
it all back together. But these fucking cables!!??!!!
:horse

My first option is going to be drilling holes in floors and running cables in the crawlspace/
sub-floor. But I need it to warm up a bit before I can do that.

I am also thinking about running some cabling above.... along the ceiling... or behind some trim
I can remove and reapply. I just want to be free of the cables on the floor.

Open to any and all suggestions----apart from burning it all down and starting over.
:LOL:

Thanks!
:beer
 

this stuff rules. You can usually make use of rack shelves, drawers, clips, cable ties and label makers to organise gear. It’s a never ending battle and sometimes you have to burn it down and redo to find what works and what is annoying.

Having powered USB cables and extenders and various hubs can help optimise where cables and power supplies go.

Etsy is full of little 3D printed stands and mounts for things which can help.
 
I keep everything running into patchbays from three areas: amp shelf, rack and desk. I just use cable sleeves for the open areas between those areas. Seeing one sleeve hugging the baseboard versus 9 individuals cables pacifies my OCD. :ROFLMAO:

I keep spare sleeves, zip ties and dual lock in the closet ready for action.

The back of my rack looks like a wild science experiment (even with semi appropriately sized wiring) but the front is as clean and calm as a summer day. (Which is all that matters lol)

stoners relate GIF
 
I keep everything running into patchbays from three areas: amp shelf, rack and desk. I just use cable sleeves for the open areas between those areas. Seeing one sleeve hugging the baseboard versus 9 individuals cables pacifies my OCD. :ROFLMAO:

I keep spare sleeves, zip ties and dual lock in the closet ready for action.

The back of my rack looks like a wild science experiment (even with semi appropriately sized wiring) but the front is as clean and calm as a summer day. (Which is all that matters lol)

stoners relate GIF


Haha! I feel you and the sweet Sound Of Music.
:LOL:

I am not going back to the maddening morass I had. Likely the last home I will own/live in
so I am going to go all in on drilling and filling.
:beer


Anyone care to share thoughts on snakes versus patchbays? Or is that a both/and scenario?
 
Shit man when my little chicks fly the coop I'm gonna be snaking cables in my crawlspace into every room. We've already encapsulated our crawlspace underneath the house and I've been slowly reconstructing our attic space into a storage area and finding out how everything is wired and routed.

In my room I have a snake connected to the rear of my interface and the box is just down next to my studio monitor stand so I can easily connect XLRs for recording. Everything else I've actually learned to not tie down because Im always moving things, experimenting and can't leave well enough alone. Most of the main important stuff is tucked away and tied up so I can easily move my desk out and get to my PC, subwoofer, power plugs, and NAS device.
 
Anyone care to share thoughts on snakes versus patchbays? Or is that a both/and scenario?
they’re serving different purposes.

Snake is essentially to get a load of inputs (and sometimes outputs) from one place to another (say between rooms or from one end of a room to another. It saves you having to have lots of separate cables all running long distances, and you can also have the sockets in an accessible place (rather than having to go behind your rack).

A patchbay is for routing your signals and mixing and matching bits of gear together, or rerouting signals to different places.

You wouldn’t want to have mics going through your patchbay - 48V can cause problems for your gear, so you always keep mics seperate to the patchbay.

Typically you might have a snake or XLR patchbay for your mics to go to your preamp inputs. And your preamps (and all other gear) would be on your patchbay.

Not sure how useful a snake box is unless you’re recording lots of channels or sending out headphone mixes to a headphone amp. If it’s just a handful of channels, one of those ethernet converter things is probably simpler. I wouldn’t skimp on a cheap snake box either, the budget ones use pretty horrible connectors and get noisy/inconsistent quickly. They can get expensive quite quickly too.

Patchbay is well worth it, and I’ve never had any issues with cheaper TRS units. A pro studio probably wants something that is a bit higher spec, but for simple/basic use TRS is fine.
 
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