Source XLR to Balanced Preamp will increase gain?


I was wondering, if I changed my CDP to a new one that has XLR out and if I can use XLR between the new CDP and the preamp, will it provide me with more gain in the system? I believe this was the case when I changed the connection between my preamp and the amp. I was told that the gain was because each "leg" of the XLR (+ve and -ve) provided 2V each (4V total), as compared to RCA which provided only 2V. In the near future, I do plan to change my CDP.

Thanks!
128x128milpai
Thanks, Milpai. Adding to Ralph's response just above, I'm not certain that it would be safe to assume that a TVC will necessarily be designed to provide unity gain at its max volume setting, for either kind of input (RCA or XLR). I wouldn't be surprised if at least a few of them are designed to provide a few db or more of voltage stepup at their max volume setting. (As you most likely realize, a transformer can be designed to boost voltage, although it can't boost power).

And to add further uncertainty, I'm not sure that different manufacturers are always consistent with respect to whether amplitudes and gains for balanced interfaces are specified with respect to the voltage on each leg, or to the voltage difference between the two legs (which of course would be twice as much).

Regards,
-- Al
Ralph,
I am not so tech savvy. Thank You for the heavy dose. I want to learn more. Can you please explain "differential" and "floating"? I understand that pin 2 is +ve while pin 3 is -ve. Based on your explanation I am tempted to try a RCA to XLR adapter on the IC that goes from my existing CDP to the TVC. I believe in this case the voltage that the TVC will remain at 2V instead of 4V which a true XLR designed CDP would provide.

Al,
My TVC is set for unity gain, as I had not opted for the 6db gain.
Milpai, the adaptor will not cause the circuit to be balanced. It simply allows you to hook things up.

Differential is where the circuit has an output based on the difference between two inputs, inverting and non-inverting.

'Floating' is where the output is independent of ground. Usually though it is referenced to ground in some way, although there is no signal current associated with the ground connection. You have a balanced TVC if I understand correctly; it should be capable of operating this way as all audio transformers can.

'Balanced' is two identical circuits but with opposite phases, inverted and non-inverted. How this **might** be different from differential is that it may not automatically convert a single-ended input to balanced, and it may not always produce one output from the difference of the two inputs.

IOW it is possible to have a balanced and differential circuit, and also one that is merely balanced but not differential. In terms of noise and performance, it is far more likely that the balanced differential circuit will perform better, and even better yet if it is floating.
Ralph,
Thank You very much for the detailed explanation. Made it so much easier to understand the "real balanced" concept.