RECORDING

http://adkproaudio.com
 
Our Sponsors
Pro Audio Products

Passeq

The PRO SHOP
Categories
· Accessories
· Acoustic Treatment
· Compressors / Limiters / Gates
· Equalizers
· Micing Systems & Spitters
· Microphones
· Mixers/ Consols
· Modular Rack Systems
· Monitor
· Preamps
· Processors
· Recording Channels
· Summing Amps
Pro Shop
Random Audio Product

phanthera
$2,087.00
Members Support
RO CLUB
You are not subscriber of RECORDING. You can subscribe from here now!
User Info, Site Stats
We received
75187375
page views since March 15, 2004
Recording Org
Navigation Map
recording.jpg HomeShow/Hide content
Access restricted to our members Feedback (contact us)
tree-L.gif Recommend Us
· Advertise Here
keyword ads
· Feeds
forums1.jpg DiscussionsShow/Hide content
tree-T.gif Forum RULES
tree-T.gif Forum Search
tree-T.gif Your Account
tree-L.gif Lost Password
pronews.gif Business SectionShow/Hide content
tree-T.gif NewsNew content !
tree-T.gif Topics
Access restricted to our members Submit News
Access restricted to our members Advertising InfoShow/Hide content
tree-T.gif keyword adsShow/Hide content
tree-L.gif Pro Audio
Linking System
Access restricted to our members Feedback (contact us)
Access restricted to our members News Search
· The Pro Shop
High End Gear
· Pro Shop!
icon_poll.gif ContentShow/Hide content
tree-T.gif Reviews & Features
tree-T.gif Stories Archive
Access restricted to our members Music_Business_Links
icon_members.gif InfoShow/Hide content
fleche.gif Books
tree-T.gif FAQ
Access restricted to our members Feedback (contact us)
fleche.gif Glossary
tree-T.gif Recommend Us
tree-T.gif Statistics
Access restricted to our members News Search
tree-T.gif Surveys
tree-L.gif Your Account
PASS IT ON!
Please link back to RO
Latest Survey
Do you earn money from music?

Yes
No



Results
Polls

Votes: 1227
Comments: 1
Mix News
·PreSonus Sponsors Recording Academy Event
·Neumann, Sennheiser to Introduce New Microphones at AES
·2008 Art of Record Production Conference is Announced
·AES 2008 New Product Submissions
·Propellerhead Supports Bob Moog Foundation with Donation

read more...©
  Forum FAQ    Search    Profile    Log in to check your private messages    Log in
  Your url ad could be here!

 
Post new topicReply to topic
View previous topic Log in to check your private messages View next topic
Author Message
patrick_like_static
Recording Org
Pro Audio Group



Joined: Sep 26, 2004
Posts: 430
Location: Springfield, Missouri, USA


------------

Books To Read
Your Forum Posts

gimmie gear

PostPosted: Thu Jul 17, 2008 7:19 am Reply with quoteBack to top

I moved into a new house about a month ago. The power in the recording area (a former garage converted into a bedroom) is really dirty: I can't record guitar amps right now because the noise is so bad. But I also found out this morning doing some acoustic guitar work that the noise is getting in through my microphones when using a high-gain preamp.

Here's a sample. The volume is soft, but I normalized into the transients so it shouldn't be too abrasive:

AC Noise (if the hotlink doesn't work, open a new window and copy+paste)

I'd first like help identifying this, whether it's EMI or radio interference. Secondly, I'd like strong opinions whether these less-than products will help: some solutions I'm looking at are the Monster PRO 2500 and Carvin AC120s. I'm only able to spend around $200 right now.
View user's profileSend private message
JoeH
Moderator



Joined: Jun 22, 2004
Posts: 1798
Location: Philadelphia, PA


------------

Books To Read
Your Forum Posts

gimmie gear

PostPosted: Thu Jul 17, 2008 7:39 am Reply with quoteBack to top

Hello Patrick;

Right off the bat, it sounds like a simple ground loop or a bad cable, not nec. "Bad AC" per se.

You can easily track down the source of the hum several ways, but I'd suggest this: Get a good clean power conditioner ($150-500, depending on your budget, make & model, and power requirements) and start with that as your ONLY source of AC power. Check the conditioner's AC outlets with a tester to confirm proper voltage is present, ditto for grounding. Use only these outlets.

Do not use any other outlets or ground sources anywhere else in the room/house at this point. Plug everything into this, one at a time, starting with the power amp, and listen as you add devices for hum, etc. (You're making a "Star-ground" this way...all ground points are the same, and all power is the same phase, etc.)

If your amp is quiet, then you can assume the line source is doing ok., Add your mixer (or computer sound card, etc.) and bring the level up to normal working levels, and try that. Eventually, you'll find out that something is adding the ground loop via a chassis or wiring issue. It could be mic cables that are picking up some local hum, as well, although truly balanced lines should be ok, even in the presence of some strong external noises.

If the hum is indeed air-borne and omni-present, your guitar pickups will be the first to let you know - as you probably know, you'll just have to turn and move to find the "Sweet spot" where the AC radiation is minimal and out of phase enough to cancel. (I really doubt this is the case, though....)

In the worst of cases, you may find a hidden transformer or power unit somewhere in your home? (Is it a stand-alone dwelling, or could you be on a party wall to a distribution transformer to the block, or a big Air conditioning system?)

Hope that helps....

_________________
Joe Hannigan, Producer
WestonSound.com - Philadelphia, PA
Acoustic Music Forum co-moderator.
View user's profileSend private messageVisit poster's websiteAIM Address
patrick_like_static
Recording Org
Pro Audio Group



Joined: Sep 26, 2004
Posts: 430
Location: Springfield, Missouri, USA


------------

Books To Read
Your Forum Posts

gimmie gear

PostPosted: Thu Jul 17, 2008 9:47 am Reply with quoteBack to top

Thanks, Joe. I'll be anxious to try your suggestions once I buy such a unit. Please speak freely: can I expect a power conditioner in the sub-$500 range to make a noticeable difference? If so, are there any models you'd recommend?

I hear two strong components in this noise: one is a steady, quickly oscillating ~G# (in the low 400 Hz range); the other is a more random, mechanical sounding pink that breaks in and out. I know very little about this kind of thing, but is it possible the latter is a voltage regulation issue?
View user's profileSend private message
JoeH
Moderator



Joined: Jun 22, 2004
Posts: 1798
Location: Philadelphia, PA


------------

Books To Read
Your Forum Posts

gimmie gear

PostPosted: Thu Jul 17, 2008 12:32 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

I'd be hard pressed to tell you which one to buy, and I'm also not sure yet that it's really "dirty" power. Are these noises everywhere, omni present on everything you turn on, or do they appear on certain devices? Does the noise change in level or type when you add/disconnect certain items in the chain? Is it possible you just don't have a good ground scheme? (Make SURE you check with a professional electrician on that....if by some chance you don't have a good ground scheme going on, you may have some SERIOUS and DANGEROUS hazards there...so be careful!)

Most comsumer and pro-sumer audio gear should have enough rectifying and filtering built into its own circuitry to filter out most line problems. (It's true, although most power-filtering manufacturers don't want you to know that!) With that in mind, assuming each unit is working properly, as well as powered by a "clean" filtering unit and all grounded together properly, you should be fine. (SHOULD being the operative word here....)

Can you try your setup elsewhere in the house, or another place entirely?

I'm still waiting to hear what happens each time you add devices to the signal chain, starting with the power amp. I really suspect there's something odd going on with an individual device's power supply or grounding scheme vs everything else. The buzz in the 400-500 range would likely be 240 doubled, or a multiple of 120 hz, definitely in the power-supply range of filtering. The other noise.....weird. Possibly an open cap or something in a circuit that's misbehaving?

The trick is to find out which device is the one picking it up, and finding out if the device is defective, or just prone to noise, and if the latter, is the noise unique to your space alone?

_________________
Joe Hannigan, Producer
WestonSound.com - Philadelphia, PA
Acoustic Music Forum co-moderator.
View user's profileSend private messageVisit poster's websiteAIM Address
RemyRAD
Moderator



Joined: Sep 26, 2005
Posts: 3313
Location: Washington DC Virginia suburbs


------------

Books To Read
Your Forum Posts

gimmie gear

PostPosted: Fri Jul 18, 2008 3:41 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

I'll tell you most of that sounds like ambient room noise from HVAC.

One of the things I've used is to simply rotate the amplifier or rotate your guitar. There are numerous electromagnetic fields all over. What you need to do is to rotate either device to null out the offending noise. This is not unusual in other studios as well including NBC in Washington DC.

If you want cleaner power, I'd recommend a power isolation transformer from Signal Transformer Corp. and/or the EQUITECH balanced power conditioners. I mean you don't like static that much do you??

Remy likes silence
Ms. Remy Ann David
View user's profileSend private messageSend e-mailAIM Address
patrick_like_static
Recording Org
Pro Audio Group



Joined: Sep 26, 2004
Posts: 430
Location: Springfield, Missouri, USA


------------

Books To Read
Your Forum Posts

gimmie gear

PostPosted: Sat Jul 19, 2008 6:40 am Reply with quoteBack to top

RemyRAD wrote:
I mean you don't like static that much do you??

Adorable.


I now realize my initial post was unclear: in the above sample, the only elements are --

Soundelux U195 [mic] ---> Summit Audio 2BA-221 [preamp] ---> Mackie Onyx 400f [computer interface]

All the noise is coming from mic gain and balanced cables.
View user's profileSend private message
RemyRAD
Moderator



Joined: Sep 26, 2005
Posts: 3313
Location: Washington DC Virginia suburbs


------------

Books To Read
Your Forum Posts

gimmie gear

PostPosted: Sat Jul 19, 2008 12:18 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

And your computer? I have found many computers, including laptops, which utilize a grounded power supply to the AC mains are frequently the culprit. Sticking on a 3 into 2 AC adapter can usually clear the problem. The problem seems most apparent on laptops but is not exclusive to those.

It's definitely pure 60 hertz so it's a ground loop. I don't hear any other harmonics other than the rooms own HVAC. Which I think is also a big problem here? You can hopefully, turn it off while you're recording? I find that more unacceptable than the 60 hertz. 60 hertz at least can be easily dealt with while HVAC noise is broadband brown noise.

Feeling in the pink
Ms. Remy Ann David
View user's profileSend private messageSend e-mailAIM Address
patrick_like_static
Recording Org
Pro Audio Group



Joined: Sep 26, 2004
Posts: 430
Location: Springfield, Missouri, USA


------------

Books To Read
Your Forum Posts

gimmie gear

PostPosted: Sun Jul 20, 2008 2:53 am Reply with quoteBack to top

Thanks, Remy.
View user's profileSend private message
BobRogers
Recording Org
Pro Audio Group



Joined: Apr 04, 2006
Posts: 1147
Location: Blacksburg, VA


------------

Books To Read
Your Forum Posts

gimmie gear

PostPosted: Sun Jul 20, 2008 4:06 am Reply with quoteBack to top

It probably doesn't need to be said, but if you are using a laptop, the easy way to check this is to run on battery for a short test.

Remy's suggestion of bypassing the path to ground through the AC cord makes me nervous even though the problem means that there is another path to ground. I think there is an old thread about safer (though more expensive) ways of getting around a computer ground loop.
View user's profileSend private messageSend e-mail
Greener
Recording Org
Pro Audio Group



Joined: Apr 27, 2008
Posts: 804


------------

Books To Read
Your Forum Posts

gimmie gear

PostPosted: Tue Jul 22, 2008 9:55 am Reply with quoteBack to top

This:
http://www.palmergear.com/pli04.shtml
Was recommended to me for the dirty ground loop my laptop creates on playback.
Haven't used it though. If you get something similar, let me know how well it works for you.
View user's profileSend private message
patrick_like_static
Recording Org
Pro Audio Group



Joined: Sep 26, 2004
Posts: 430
Location: Springfield, Missouri, USA


------------

Books To Read
Your Forum Posts

gimmie gear

PostPosted: Wed Jul 23, 2008 1:39 am Reply with quoteBack to top

Thanks, guys. I use my desktop for audio applications.

I'll let you all know what I end up buying and whether it works.
View user's profileSend private message
Display posts from previous:      
Post new topicReply to topic
View previous topic Log in to check your private messages View next topic



This topic sponsored by:

  Sound Performance Lab
(Tube, Mastering, Analog Gear)

  
  
  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum



Powered by phpBB © 2001 phpBB Group

PHP-Nuke Port by Tom Nitzschner [Total Redesign By: Lorkan Themes] & 2004 www.toms-home.com
Pro Shop Cart
Your cart is empty.

[ Browse ]
Business Section
(News, Articles
Classifieds etc.)
· Win a 64-bit Mobile Studio from Rain Recording, Cakewalk and PreSonus
· Recording Connection
· BTE Audio releases BEQ5 British Console Equaliser Algorithm
· Warm Sound Engineering, Looking for the tape sound? We have the solution!
· Producer/Engineer Denny Bridges Joins East Coast Recording Company
· Vocalbooth.com™ Provides Working Studio for VOICE 2008
· BTE Audio releases BEQ4 British Console Equaliser Algorithm
· The audioMIDI.com Film & TV Composition Clinic

[ More in News Section ]
Current Topics!
Last 10 Forum Messages

Building My 1st Recording Room
Last post by eyeveedrip in Studio Construction Forum on Sep 05, 2008 at 09:09:17

Vocal Bleed
Last post by Greener in Home, Project Studio's, Newbies on Sep 05, 2008 at 08:26:55

recording.org product giveaway
Last post by Greener in Pro Sound Chat on Sep 05, 2008 at 08:06:12

Beat Detective-ish question...
Last post by jordy in Recording Forum on Sep 05, 2008 at 08:04:12

Mbox Mini 2 or PreSonus Audio Box
Last post by skywirest in Recording Forum on Sep 05, 2008 at 07:13:17

Busted
Last post by sshack in Song & Mix Critique on Sep 05, 2008 at 07:13:06

Question about connecting guitar amp to multi track recorder
Last post by Greener in Recording Forum on Sep 05, 2008 at 07:08:36

recording demos for singers,songwriters
Last post by adoremi in Music Business Forum on Sep 05, 2008 at 07:07:34

want to share a recording studio in NYC?
Last post by Greener in Music Business Forum on Sep 05, 2008 at 07:01:06

Don't want to double guitar
Last post by sshack in Recording Forum on Sep 05, 2008 at 06:00:52


[ RECORDING ]
New Topics!

Beat Detective-ish question...
Mbox Mini 2 or PreSonus Audio Box
recording demos for singers,songwriters
Balanced/unbalanced dilemma - Gear advice needed!
want to share a recording studio in NYC?
What would you like your DAW to do?
Should I buy a mixer?
@cucco
Phonic Helix 18 FireWire MKI - Vista Compatibility Mode?
Don't want to double guitar
recording.org product giveaway
Question about connecting guitar amp to multi track recorder
Vocal Bleed
Open or Closed cell foam???
Newbie needing guidance
Busted
Power Amp Speaker Impedance Woes
Presonus Audiobox or Mbox 2 Mini?
How to connect this stuff?

RECORDING Forums

BookMark

 _MAKEBOOKMARK

Recording Org RSS Feeds Community News. or Pro Audio Forums

Read this if you are a new poster Rules, who needs em?

For more information on advertising, investing , merging or any other ideas you may have for this community" Feedback

Pro Audio forums, audio reviews and all the moderating here is volunteer. Please remember no-one is being paid to be here or deliver hot coffee. Play Fair, be polite, patient and considerate to others. Title your topics properly and do not slander anyone, ever online. Also, if you love Recording Org and would like to make any donation in support of this site, please contact the Feedback link on the side bar. RO admin would be more than happy to add any contribution gift to the RO kitty. Give by becoming an RO Club Member and get a little better RO options.
Read this before your post here: Recording Org Disclaimer


This site can be translated into 13 languages. 錄音工作室幫助下,新聞和信息,數位專業音頻論壇, Opname studio helpen, nieuws en informatie, digitale pro audio forums, Studio d'enregistrement à l'aide de nouvelles et d'information, forums de l'audio numérique pro, Tonstudio helfen, Nachrichten und Informationen, digitale Pro-Audio-Foren, Estudio de grabación ayuda, información y noticias, foros de audio digital profesional. help, pro tools, cubase, nuendo, DAW, Music Education, Arranging, Composing,
PHP-Nuke Copyright © 2005 by Francisco Burzi. This is free software, and you may redistribute it under the GPL. PHP-Nuke comes with absolutely no warranty, for details, see the license.
Page Generation: 0.58 Seconds

.: fiSubBrown Shadow phpbb2 style by Lorkan Themes :.
.: Original Theme (FiSubSilver Shadow) by: Daz 2004 :.