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#1
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I stood up an old receiver next to my rack for its radio, connected it
to two channels of my mixer and sometimes get hum. The mixer is powered by an external transformer; the receiver power cord has no ground. They are both plugged into the same power strip. When I reverse the polarity of the receiver power cord plug, the hum is louder when it is present. Sometimes the hum is loud and at other times barely audible until it gets on your nerves. Everything about this situation is intermittent. I can usually get the hum to stop if I repeatedly rotate and reinsert the connectors on both sides. I also had this problem with a tuner (still on a rack shelf) which progressed over a couple of years to the point that I dragged out the old receiver to use instead. The tuner also had a problem with the 75 ohm lead from the attic antenna, which I fixed by adding a 300 ohm transformer. Is this tuner likely fried? If my next tuner has a three prong plug, will this solve the problem? Do I need special audio cables? Bob -- Bob Simon remove both "x"s from domain for private replies |
#2
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![]() "Bob Simon" wrote in message ... I stood up an old receiver next to my rack for its radio, connected it to two channels of my mixer and sometimes get hum. The mixer is powered by an external transformer; the receiver power cord has no ground. They are both plugged into the same power strip. When I reverse the polarity of the receiver power cord plug, the hum is louder when it is present. Sometimes the hum is loud and at other times barely audible until it gets on your nerves. Everything about this situation is intermittent. I can usually get the hum to stop if I repeatedly rotate and reinsert the connectors on both sides. I also had this problem with a tuner (still on a rack shelf) which progressed over a couple of years to the point that I dragged out the old receiver to use instead. The tuner also had a problem with the 75 ohm lead from the attic antenna, which I fixed by adding a 300 ohm transformer. Is this tuner likely fried? If my next tuner has a three prong plug, will this solve the problem? Do I need special audio cables? Bob -- Bob Simon remove both "x"s from domain for private replies Sounds like one or more bad patch cords to me. Mark Z. |
#3
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"Bob Simon" wrote in message
... I stood up an old receiver next to my rack for its radio, connected it to two channels of my mixer and sometimes get hum. The mixer is powered by an external transformer; the receiver power cord has no ground. They are both plugged into the same power strip. When I reverse the polarity of the receiver power cord plug, the hum is louder when it is present. Sometimes the hum is loud and at other times barely audible until it gets on your nerves. Everything about this situation is intermittent. I can usually get the hum to stop if I repeatedly rotate and reinsert the connectors on both sides. I also had this problem with a tuner (still on a rack shelf) which progressed over a couple of years to the point that I dragged out the old receiver to use instead. The tuner also had a problem with the 75 ohm lead from the attic antenna, which I fixed by adding a 300 ohm transformer. Is this tuner likely fried? If my next tuner has a three prong plug, will this solve the problem? Do I need special audio cables? Bob Tuner is probably OK, the RF balun at the antenna end has zilch to do with AF o/p. That receiver exit *may need* a series blocking capacitort, as there may be DC present with ripple leaking out of it. Check integrity of all audio connects. The equipment which is amplifying the source signal should have the best ground (ie, its metalwork is grounded), and, if your leads are unbalanced, it is best to tie destination screen to ground, and float it at source end when/if connected to a device's unbalanced device o/p. Of course, if the source signal is balanced, then use both core and screen of jumper lead to transfer the audio. But, in the worst case, the hum may only disappear when an audio isolation 1:1 xfrmr is introduced between source and next stage. Jim |
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