Ground loop hummmmm......
Not one to give up easily, I tried attacking this problem yesterday to no avail.
Ground loop humm from Pulsar 2. Monitored with headphones from headphone out jack on mixer.
Running analog out into a Mackie 1604VLZ mixer. Nothing else connected to mixer or PC. Both PC/monitor and mixer connected to same AC source. Nothing else connected. Not even the printer or phone line. Analog cables very high quality (even tried another set). Analog outs into any 2 channels on mixer.
Ground loop humm.....
Cured problem by connecting AC adapter to mixer AC cord (disabling ground connection). When I tried using the same AC adapter on the PC AC line cord, it had no effect. Tried a second mixer. Same problem, so I'm sure it's not the mixer.
Tried every possible solution known to man including swapping PCI slots, BIOS settings, msconfig'ing everything away.
Wat the heck?
Any ideas?
With the AC adapter on the mixer, sounds beautiful. No humm and quiet. But don't want to leave it that way for safety reasons. Checked continuity from mixer to PC case. Zero ohms. What am I missing?
Ground loop humm from Pulsar 2. Monitored with headphones from headphone out jack on mixer.
Running analog out into a Mackie 1604VLZ mixer. Nothing else connected to mixer or PC. Both PC/monitor and mixer connected to same AC source. Nothing else connected. Not even the printer or phone line. Analog cables very high quality (even tried another set). Analog outs into any 2 channels on mixer.
Ground loop humm.....
Cured problem by connecting AC adapter to mixer AC cord (disabling ground connection). When I tried using the same AC adapter on the PC AC line cord, it had no effect. Tried a second mixer. Same problem, so I'm sure it's not the mixer.
Tried every possible solution known to man including swapping PCI slots, BIOS settings, msconfig'ing everything away.
Wat the heck?
Any ideas?
With the AC adapter on the mixer, sounds beautiful. No humm and quiet. But don't want to leave it that way for safety reasons. Checked continuity from mixer to PC case. Zero ohms. What am I missing?
Lift the ground and be happy.
I know the fear you have. I know the manuals say not to do it.
Every audio engineer I ever talked to curses grounding plugs...because different companies ground their gear differently.
They all lift the grounds.
I do too.
In fact, the first thing I do when I get a new piece of gear is rip out that ground plug.
Now my UPS *IS* grounded. The rest are not.
I don't know of another way to do it short of buying an islolated transformer.
Cheers
I know the fear you have. I know the manuals say not to do it.
Every audio engineer I ever talked to curses grounding plugs...because different companies ground their gear differently.
They all lift the grounds.
I do too.
In fact, the first thing I do when I get a new piece of gear is rip out that ground plug.
Now my UPS *IS* grounded. The rest are not.
I don't know of another way to do it short of buying an islolated transformer.
Cheers
That theory of ground loops isn't much clear for me, I didn't understand what exactly can be cosidered as a ground loop and what cannot
For example, the connection of a stereo channel from soundcard to amp is made with two cables both carring ground that is the same for them, isn't it a ground loop?
- sorry for bad English, I hope you understand-
I learned by many attempts that reducing redundance of ground wires helps very much against noise when modifying the electrical wiring of my guitar (a Fender Stratocaster
). In that guitar I noticed doubled contacts made with the help of the internal shield (congrats to Fender for this!) and since I removed unuseful wires it is really less noisy.
Can you explain me when this problem occours and what is the physical explanation?
Thanx
(Strato)Fede
For example, the connection of a stereo channel from soundcard to amp is made with two cables both carring ground that is the same for them, isn't it a ground loop?
- sorry for bad English, I hope you understand-
I learned by many attempts that reducing redundance of ground wires helps very much against noise when modifying the electrical wiring of my guitar (a Fender Stratocaster

Can you explain me when this problem occours and what is the physical explanation?
Thanx
(Strato)Fede
Here's a couple of articles I found on Sound on Sound's web site. I'm sure there are several others besides which might help.
http://www.sospubs.co.uk/sos/1994_artic ... loops.html
http://www.sospubs.co.uk/sos/jan02/articles/faq0102.asp
Cheers,
Will
http://www.sospubs.co.uk/sos/1994_artic ... loops.html
http://www.sospubs.co.uk/sos/jan02/articles/faq0102.asp
Cheers,
Will
Appreciate the feedback. Absolutely nothing attached to the mixer or the PC other than a monitor and the stereo instrument cables from the analog outputs to the mixer.
I forgot about the monitor though. That was still connected to AC with the standard AC cord. Maybe explains why the adapter didn't work on the PC
Still, very wierd. Just can't bring myself to lift the ground connection on the mixer. Would hate to kill a client
Thanks all!
I forgot about the monitor though. That was still connected to AC with the standard AC cord. Maybe explains why the adapter didn't work on the PC

Still, very wierd. Just can't bring myself to lift the ground connection on the mixer. Would hate to kill a client

Thanks all!
Call a qualified electrician, they will be able to wire up your studio in such a way to eliminate ground loop, they might ground lift the mixer but earth it somewhere else.
Also like subhuman suggested try using special cables that cancel ground loop hum, you can make them yourself the articles that Will Ellis mentioned above will tell you how.
Also like subhuman suggested try using special cables that cancel ground loop hum, you can make them yourself the articles that Will Ellis mentioned above will tell you how.
Add life to your days, not days to your life.
Don't lift the ground in the mains cord. As Krabat says, lift the ground in the audio interconnection cables.
Another good site for info:-
http://www.rane.com/library.html
This is a good doc to have handy:-
http://www.rane.com/note110.html
Another good site for info:-
http://www.rane.com/library.html
This is a good doc to have handy:-
http://www.rane.com/note110.html
May be there is any noise in your electric line. Tehre are AC Filter (a brand: TRANSPARENT) that eliminates that noises.
You can try your Ground connection to be sure that its not broken at any point.
I know a case of a musician (not death) but severally burn in his right hand because of a GUITAR and a MIC that touched the strings and was ground lifted. It was in the school wich I had study "Sound Technical". Thats ironic because they teached me not to lift ground...
DJATWORK
You can try your Ground connection to be sure that its not broken at any point.
I know a case of a musician (not death) but severally burn in his right hand because of a GUITAR and a MIC that touched the strings and was ground lifted. It was in the school wich I had study "Sound Technical". Thats ironic because they teached me not to lift ground...
DJATWORK
Luis Maria Gonzalez Lentijo
DjatWork! Optimizaciones
Buenos Aires
Argentina
DjatWork! Optimizaciones
Buenos Aires
Argentina