I started a podcast eight months ago. I'd done everything right — a decent microphone, a proper audio interface, acoustic treatment on the walls of my spare room, a pop filter, a mic stand. I'd watched the tutorials, read the guides, done the setup properly. And yet every recording had a problem I couldn't fix: a low, persistent hum that sat underneath everything I said, audible to anyone listening with headphones, impossible to fully remove in post-production without also removing warmth from my voice.
I spent six months trying to solve it. I moved the microphone. I changed the gain settings. I tried different recording software. I bought a noise gate. The hum persisted. It was quieter sometimes and louder other times, but it was always there, and it was the thing that made my podcast sound like something recorded in a spare room rather than something recorded properly.
The problem was my XLR cable. A cheap, unshielded one that had come bundled with something else and that I'd been using because it was there. The Massive Discounts XLR 3-Pin Shielded Microphone Cable cost me £7.99 and eliminated the hum completely. Six months of troubleshooting, solved by an £8 cable.
Why I Decided I Needed It
A listener — a kind one, who prefaced her message with several compliments before getting to the point — mentioned the hum in an email. She said she listened with headphones and that the background noise was distracting. I knew she was right. I'd been hoping it wasn't as noticeable as I thought. It was.
I went back to basics and started researching the signal chain from the microphone to the interface. The cable was the one component I hadn't considered, because I'd assumed a cable was a cable. It isn't. An unshielded XLR cable picks up electromagnetic interference from nearby electronics — computers, monitors, power supplies — and introduces it into the signal as a hum. A shielded cable doesn't. The shielding is the difference between clean audio and the hum I'd been living with for six months.
I ordered the Massive Discounts XLR Shielded Cable from ALTOE for £7.99 and recorded an episode the day it arrived.
Why This One Specifically
The shielding is the essential feature, and the Massive Discounts cable has it. The balanced 3-pin XLR design with full shielding means that electromagnetic interference from nearby electronics is blocked rather than transmitted — the cable carries the audio signal cleanly from the microphone to the interface without picking up anything else along the way.
The build quality is also genuinely good for the price. The connectors are solid, the cable itself is flexible without being flimsy, and the strain relief at both ends means it won't develop faults at the connection points with regular use. At £7.99, it's priced like a budget cable but built like something considerably more expensive.
The length is also right for a home studio setup — long enough to give you flexibility in microphone placement without being so long that it becomes a cable management problem.
What Happened the First Recording
I plugged it in, opened my recording software, and looked at the waveform before I started speaking. The noise floor — the baseline level of sound when nothing is happening — was lower than I'd ever seen it. I put on my headphones and listened to the silence. It was actually silent. No hum. No interference. Just the sound of a room with acoustic treatment doing its job properly.
I recorded the episode. When I listened back, it sounded like a different podcast. The same voice, the same room, the same microphone — but clean. Properly clean, in a way that six months of troubleshooting had failed to achieve. The hum was gone. The listener who'd emailed me wrote back after that episode to say she'd noticed the difference immediately.
How It Changed Things
My podcast sounds professional now. Not because I changed anything significant — same microphone, same interface, same room, same voice — but because the signal chain is clean from end to end. The cable was the weak link, and replacing it with a shielded one removed the problem that everything else had been unable to fix.
I've also stopped dreading the post-production process. When every recording has a hum that needs to be managed, editing becomes a chore. When the recording is clean, editing is just editing — cutting, pacing, making it better. That's what it's supposed to be.
For £7.99, the Massive Discounts XLR Shielded Cable solved a problem I'd spent six months and considerably more money trying to fix. The lesson, which I should have learned sooner, is that the cable matters. A shielded cable is not the same as an unshielded one. The difference is £8 and six months of unnecessary hum.
Get the Massive Discounts XLR Audio Cable here: Massive Discounts XLR Audio Cable – 3-Pin Shielded Microphone Cord
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