To the page content

22.11 - 02.12

cyberweek-deal

Neutrik NP2 RX

801

Angled Jack Plug

  • 2 - Pole
  • 6.3 mm
  • Colour: Silver
Available since March 2007
Item number 110748
Sales Unit 1 piece(s)
Installation No
Mono/Stereo Mono
Angled Yes
Type TS (mono/unsym.)
Plug Jack 6,3 mm TS male angled
$3.44
The shipping costs are calculated on the checkout page.
In stock
In stock

This product is in stock and can be shipped immediately.

Standard Delivery Times
1

801 Customer ratings

4.8 / 5

You have to be logged in to rate products.

Note: To prevent ratings from being based on hearsay, smattering or surreptitious advertising we only allow ratings from real users on our website, who have bought the equipment from us.

After logging in you will also find all items you can rate under rate products in the customer centre.

quality

288 Reviews

j
Best quality jacks - hands down
jrakus 30.09.2020
After years and years of soldering guitar cables I know why I buy Neutrik jacks.
They're not cheap but the money spent will get back to you. Trust me I try to find everything as cheap as I can. Cheaper jacks always come with problems. Try to unsolder a cheap jack and use it again... problems. You will also burn the inner insulation/plastic on a cheap jack if you're not careful. Never happened to me with Neutrik.
You can use the same Neutrik jacks again and again.

Neutrik got everything perfect. It's easy to solder, holds the cable well, very robust.
quality
0
0
Report

Report

FM
An industry standard for a reason
Funeral Musician 22.01.2023
These plugs have an ingenious, time-tested strain relief, which works perfectly every single time, but the terminals inside of them are quite a bit closer to each other than on some of their competitors, so soldering a thicker cable to them is not as easy. It is not hard, but it is harder. Since I had never experienced any issues with these plugs, I ordered six of them for my home-made patch cables. When I opened the bags and inspected them, I noticed that on some of them, the molding of the strain relief was a little less precise than on others, and when I screwed them together, the parts did not fit together as well as before, and sometimes, there was an uneven gap between the metal body of the plug and the strain relief. I tried taking them apart and putting them back together a few times, but the issues persisted. In a moment of creativity, I even tried mixing and matching parts between plugs, but it did not help much. Then, I looked at the packaging the plugs had come in. Curiously, on some of them, it was written “Made in Liechtenstein”, while on others — “Designed in Liechtenstein”. Does that mean the manufacturing has been moved elsewhere? That would explain some of the plugs being lower quality. In any case, I will not be risking my money with the Neutrik plugs anymore. While all the six plugs were still functional, as a perfectionist, I want my cables to not only work but also look nice and tidy. In the past, the Neutrik plugs used to fulfill that request, but not anymore.
quality
0
0
Report

Report

PR
Jack plug elbows.
Peter R. 438 23.10.2014
I don't use effect pedals, my pedal is a polytune. Straight jack connectors, into & out of my polytune, on the stage floor, get broken easily when I "by mistake" stand on them.

The answer is, remove broken jacks, then fit elbows. They last for years.

The cheapest ones do a good job, but these (a few cents more) do a "very" good job, chrome looks better than plastic (to me) and saves a few bucks on buying new cables.

Local music shops around here, have to order spares like this, then they really cost a lot of money (if/when they arrive), plus the "fuel in the car". Thomann deliver to my door within 3 days.

Great to see somewhere who still carry & sells this sort of guitar and PA spares & accessories for us musicians at sensible prices.
quality
3
0
Report

Report

BI
Like a lock
Benjamin I. 01.08.2019
For a few pennies more this system holds the cable much more tightly than the lower grade plugs. There is an internal long cylindrical plastic claw that keeps the cable in place without biting it. In case something pulls the cable it won't strip or break the soldering points.

Simplistic plugs with a pliable metal holder that clamps over the cable can damage the cable when you crimp it or if something pulls the cable. This system is safer and tougher so there is no reason to use another in my opinion. I have a couple Neutrik plugs that I bought almost thirty years ago, I soldered them to several cables over time, and they still work flawlessly. The metal frame is so tough.
quality
0
0
Report

Report