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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
Clyde Slick
 
Posts: n/a
Default No grounding Wire for turntable sony


"Trevor Wilson" wrote in message
...

wrote in message
oups.com...

yu wrote:

Hi

As per the thread heading, what i meant to say was, I have a Sony
direct drive turntable but the turntable has no separate grounding
wire.

Was it designed like that or its missing? as in is it mandatory that
all Turntables come with a grounding wire?

and if the answer is yes, is there a solution say by means of attaching
a wire ( to which part of the turntable) to the problem of a missing
wire?

Thank you.

Sorry, i am poor in english.


Sorry for the response from the last idiot. This place is full of turds
like that, so you have to watch where you step. Good thing you didn't
get him anyway.


**You ****ing idiot. My answers were concise, accurate and to the point.
Your answers are as follows:


I'd say YES all turntables come with a grounding wire,


**Utter and complete bull****. If you don't know the ****ing answers, then
I suggest you keep your stupid trap shut. MANY turntables are and have
been supplied without separate grounding wires. Idiot.


only because I
haven't seen one yet that didn't.


**So, what's your point? That you have bugger all experience? That much is
obvious.

I had a direct drive Sony (PSX70 I
think), and it had a grounding wire built into the phono cables. No
worries, you can easily add a grounding wire.


**Utter, banal nonsense. Adding a ground wire is more likely to CAUSE
problems, assuming there is no problem to start with. If the OP is not
experiencing any hum problems, then no extra grounding wire will help. It
will, in fact, cause problems.

One end would be connected to a screw terminal on the back of your
amplifier. The other would go to the turntable. Now you might find a
grounding screw on the back of the turntable. If not, you have to open
up the bottom of the turntable. I would ground it to the base of the
tonearm inside the turntable, unless you find an appropriate grounding
screw elsewhere (that has a wire running to the tonearm). Look to see
where the phono cables lead to, inside the turntable.


**Oh, you are a real moron. I suggest you stick to your day job and leave
audio problems to professionals, who don't dish out bogus advice.


His day job is as a paychaitrist.
As a mental health professional, he can
straighten out your meds. Amateur morons
like you shouldn't be fooling around with that stuff.



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