Michelle911
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Help with a weird ground loop problem?
well, first, I've had ground loops before and fixed them by simply buying and using the proper equipment. but that didn't work in this case. I'll try and make this as short but complete as possible. Signal Path: Guitar → Pedal Board → Amp → AmpFX Loop Send → MultiEffects Rack → AmpFx Loop Return. I then line out to my Audio Interface on my PC from the back of my MultiEffects Rack and get a ground loop hum... BUT it's my Amp that's producing the hum. I've put an Eliminator in between the Rack and the PC but it did nothing. Kinda makes sense right? since the signal is traveling from Amp to PC and there's no noise on the PC... not sure how it's coming back to my amp or how I could fix it. So, thanks!! I will really appreciate any ideas here :)
- My gear - M-Audio M-Track Quad - M-Audio BX8 monitors
- Intel 980x @4ghz w/24G 1800mhz Ram - Windows7 64bit Pro
- ESP FRX EII - Jackson Dinky Reverse Pro - ESP LTD F415FM 5 String Bass - M-Audio Axiom Air 49 - M-Audio Axiom 25 - Source Audio Hothand USB - Orange TH30h Amplifier w/4x12 slant Cabinet - Art SGX2000 24bit tube preamp w/X-15 Ultrafoot - Maxon OD808 Overdrive - Maxon CP101 Compressor - MXR Noise Clamp - Source Audio Soundblox Pro Polymod Filter w/ HotHand ring - Ibanez Airplane Flanger
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BASSJOKER
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Re: Help with a weird ground loop problem?
2015/06/04 23:33:53
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Any major flourescent lighting near your amp? (long shot..but is an old prob sometimes) ....also...try running all power thru same outlet source if haven't yet. curious what model amp....
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Michelle911
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Hey, thanks for mentioning.... but no, no fluorescent lighting at all in here on on this rooms circuit. I do have a lot of stuff in here tho, I thought about trying to run it all on one power source but there's too much for that... I can't imagine all the outlets I'm using... let's see, I'll take a count. ok, so 29. That's all my gear, and my PC (with 5 monitors) and a few DC adapters too. That seems like a lot to me, but also when it comes to a real studio maybe not very many, right? Anyhow, everything that plugs in is plugged into good Belkin surge suppressors. Amp is an Orange TH30h with a 4x12 cab, my baby! :) (edit: updated gear in my sig) (2nd edit: wait, I just realized, I do have one LCD monitor, those are lit with florescent lights, I'll try unplugging it first thing tomorrow and report back)
post edited by Michelle911 - 2015/06/05 02:33:16
- My gear - M-Audio M-Track Quad - M-Audio BX8 monitors
- Intel 980x @4ghz w/24G 1800mhz Ram - Windows7 64bit Pro
- ESP FRX EII - Jackson Dinky Reverse Pro - ESP LTD F415FM 5 String Bass - M-Audio Axiom Air 49 - M-Audio Axiom 25 - Source Audio Hothand USB - Orange TH30h Amplifier w/4x12 slant Cabinet - Art SGX2000 24bit tube preamp w/X-15 Ultrafoot - Maxon OD808 Overdrive - Maxon CP101 Compressor - MXR Noise Clamp - Source Audio Soundblox Pro Polymod Filter w/ HotHand ring - Ibanez Airplane Flanger
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mettelus
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Another culprit is circuits with variable voltage switches (incandescent light switches) which may not be isolated from the receptacles properly. I interesting method for finding EMI is to use a single coil guitar (only one coil online) and run it around the area your gear is in. If you have that available, can leave your recording setup powered, but use a single coil (either just through the amp, or all the way to the audio interface). Just be careful of gains when doing it.
ASUS ROG Maximus X Hero (Wi-Fi AC), i7-8700k, 16GB RAM, GTX-1070Ti, Win 10 Pro, Saffire PRO 24 DSP, A-300 PRO, plus numerous gadgets and gizmos that make or manipulate sound in some way.
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Jim Roseberry
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Re: oops
2015/06/05 09:27:40
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☼ Best Answerby Michelle911 2015/06/10 17:13:20
First, try running everything from a single outlet. If that fails to eliminate the noise, run the line-out (from the Multi-EFX) into a DI box and lift the ground.
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Michelle911
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thanks for the help you guys... mettelus, unfortunately no luck with the single coil experiment. Jim, I assume you mean from a single duplex more so than an single outlet? sorry if that seems like a stupid question... the DI box I purchased has already been sent back but it did not have a ground lift circuit... but after a bit of reading and shopping I see that some of them do. I'm guessing this would be a good next piece of equipment to try. thanks everyone. the guy at sweetwater gave up on my problem and no one at gearslutz even commented. so I truly appreciate you all helping me! not sure where else I'd turn...
- My gear - M-Audio M-Track Quad - M-Audio BX8 monitors
- Intel 980x @4ghz w/24G 1800mhz Ram - Windows7 64bit Pro
- ESP FRX EII - Jackson Dinky Reverse Pro - ESP LTD F415FM 5 String Bass - M-Audio Axiom Air 49 - M-Audio Axiom 25 - Source Audio Hothand USB - Orange TH30h Amplifier w/4x12 slant Cabinet - Art SGX2000 24bit tube preamp w/X-15 Ultrafoot - Maxon OD808 Overdrive - Maxon CP101 Compressor - MXR Noise Clamp - Source Audio Soundblox Pro Polymod Filter w/ HotHand ring - Ibanez Airplane Flanger
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Jim Roseberry
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Michelle911 Jim, I assume you mean from a single duplex more so than an single outlet? sorry if that seems like a stupid question... the DI box I purchased has already been sent back but it did not have a ground lift circuit... but after a bit of reading and shopping I see that some of them do. I'm guessing this would be a good next piece of equipment to try.
Yes, I meant a single duplex (pair) of electrical plugs. They share a single ground... If the issue is a ground loop (almost certainly the case), using a direct box with a ground-lift feature will solve the problem. This is a common issue... and a common solution.
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wst3
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it might be a ground loop, it might be a pin-1 problem, it might be any number of things, and it is going to be difficult to diagnose on a forum, but let's give it a shot eh? First - is everything properly grounded. If all the gear has a three prong power cord is the ground conductor on the outlet connected to ground? Don't laugh, I've run into that many times, especially with low cost outlet strips and power "conditioners". If you don't know how to test this, or don't have a friend that knows how to do this then go to a hardware store and pick up one of those outlet testers (whatayaknow - even Amazon sells them - LINK) It won't identify every possible problem, but it will let you know if all three conductors are connected correctly. Second - start taking things apart. It sounds like you've already started down the path. If you disconnect the multi-effects rack from the amplifier does the hum go away? In theory (and I love theories<G>) the output from the multi-effects rack ought to be isolated already. You didn't mention what this rack is, can you provide more detail? Third - should have been first I suppose - you also didn't mention details about this isolator you inserted . What is it? Many such products are pure snake oil, the only way to get good sound and proper galvanic isolation is a transformer, and a good transformer is expensive. Fourth - powering everything from a single outlet can work, but not if the outlet strips are poorly constructed. I've measured 10s of Ohms of impedance at 60 Hz on some cheap rack mount power strips. UGH! If you can provide some more details we can make the hum go away. I've yet to see a power line noise problem that could not be solved. Some take longer than others to figure out, that's all!
-- Bill Audio Enterprise KB3KJF
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Michelle911
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thanks for that Jim, I didn't know about a ground lift. seems like a lot of eliminators have that, except for the one I bought lol my luck, I bought a good one too... anyhow I have a new one on the way, hoping it will fix things. Bill, fortunately I know my room is all grounded properly, all new outlets and new wiring in the last ten years. Me and my dad did it ourselves (he's a contractor). I'm into home theater too, so yeah, have had ground loops pop up before, but always managed to fix them on my own with the proper equipment. This is the first I've run into one that's left me all ??? I have ground testers on each power strip/suppressor too and all read positive. I'll have my new eliminator in a couple days, if that doesn't solve things I'm glad to know people here are willing to help me solve my issues - much appreciated!
- My gear - M-Audio M-Track Quad - M-Audio BX8 monitors
- Intel 980x @4ghz w/24G 1800mhz Ram - Windows7 64bit Pro
- ESP FRX EII - Jackson Dinky Reverse Pro - ESP LTD F415FM 5 String Bass - M-Audio Axiom Air 49 - M-Audio Axiom 25 - Source Audio Hothand USB - Orange TH30h Amplifier w/4x12 slant Cabinet - Art SGX2000 24bit tube preamp w/X-15 Ultrafoot - Maxon OD808 Overdrive - Maxon CP101 Compressor - MXR Noise Clamp - Source Audio Soundblox Pro Polymod Filter w/ HotHand ring - Ibanez Airplane Flanger
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BassDaddy
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Man, I got a lot of good stuff from this thread. Thanks everyone.
It's Bass, not Bass. i7 2700K, 16GB DDR3, 2 SSD sample drives and OS drive, HDD SATAIII for projects, 2 24" monitors Focusrite Saffire Pro 24, Focusrite VRM Box, LAVA Lamp, SONAR Platinum 64 bit, Mackie MCU and 1 MCU XT, Akai Advance 49, Windows 10, Komplete 9 Ultimate, Cakewalk, Toontrack, IK, AAS, XLN, UVI, Air Music Tech, Waves Factory, Sample Tek and Sonivox VSTi's. Overloud, T-Racks, Audio Damage, D16, Nomad Factory, Waves Gold FX
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fireberd
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Being a former amp tech, I used to run into ground loops frequently from customers. Having everything on one circuit doesn't make any difference. Its the "difference in potential of the grounds" that is the problem. Rack equipment can cause ground loop hums because they are all mounted to the metal rails. They sell "humfree's" that are nylon isolators to keep the rack ears of the unit causing it isolated from the rails. Lifting the AC power ground on one piece of equipment sometimes takes care of the problem, but you have to make sure you have a good ground from the other piece(s) or there is a shock potential. A D.I. box with a ground lift can help in some cases. In some cases using an Ebtech Hum Eliminator in the signal path can take care of the hum. Finally, if using high impedance signal lines (e.g. guitar cords), cheap cords with poor shielding or using cords with molded ends (not metal like a good Switchcraft plug) can introduce hum.
"GCSG Productions" Franklin D-10 Pedal Steel Guitar (primary instrument). Nashville Telecaster, Bass, etc. ASUS ROG Maximus VIII Hero M/B, i7 6700K CPU, 16GB Ram, SSD and conventional hard drives, Win 10 Pro and Win 10 Pro Insider Pre-Release Sonar Platinum/CbB. MOTU 896MK3 Hybrid, Tranzport, X-Touch, JBL LSR308 Monitors, Ozone 5, Studio One 4.1 ISRC Registered Member of Nashville based R.O.P.E. Assn.
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BassDaddy
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Do those ferrite deals you clip on to your cables help? You see those built into many wallwarts and other devices with cables.
It's Bass, not Bass. i7 2700K, 16GB DDR3, 2 SSD sample drives and OS drive, HDD SATAIII for projects, 2 24" monitors Focusrite Saffire Pro 24, Focusrite VRM Box, LAVA Lamp, SONAR Platinum 64 bit, Mackie MCU and 1 MCU XT, Akai Advance 49, Windows 10, Komplete 9 Ultimate, Cakewalk, Toontrack, IK, AAS, XLN, UVI, Air Music Tech, Waves Factory, Sample Tek and Sonivox VSTi's. Overloud, T-Racks, Audio Damage, D16, Nomad Factory, Waves Gold FX
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fireberd
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Those are for "RFI" not ground loop hums.
"GCSG Productions" Franklin D-10 Pedal Steel Guitar (primary instrument). Nashville Telecaster, Bass, etc. ASUS ROG Maximus VIII Hero M/B, i7 6700K CPU, 16GB Ram, SSD and conventional hard drives, Win 10 Pro and Win 10 Pro Insider Pre-Release Sonar Platinum/CbB. MOTU 896MK3 Hybrid, Tranzport, X-Touch, JBL LSR308 Monitors, Ozone 5, Studio One 4.1 ISRC Registered Member of Nashville based R.O.P.E. Assn.
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mettelus
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Another option to consider with this is (if tracking) is a program with noise reduction by noise print capability. If a second or two of "silence" is captured at the ends of each take, it makes for simple destructive edits. There was a thread posted last week mentioning Adobe Audition 3 (there is also a link to the 3.0.1 patch lower in that thread). That has this capability, and can also be added to the Utilities menu for quicker editing if desired. Unfortunately, for performance, this route won't cut it. I took my amp to max power settings for the first time in a long time last weekend and ended up just doing the above (but was just tracking with it). My amp actually recommends not doing this, since it has some excessive signal boosting built in and compounds any noise issues (even minor ones).
ASUS ROG Maximus X Hero (Wi-Fi AC), i7-8700k, 16GB RAM, GTX-1070Ti, Win 10 Pro, Saffire PRO 24 DSP, A-300 PRO, plus numerous gadgets and gizmos that make or manipulate sound in some way.
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Michelle911
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Re: oops
2015/06/09 16:24:59
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☄ Helpfulby mettelus 2015/06/09 17:22:21
Hey guys, I just got my hum eliminator today and plugged it all in, same hum as before... then I hit the lift ground button and heard nothing, beautiful silence! so thanks to everyone for the help :) And just for posterity it's an Art Zdirect, is a passive box (which is nice, did not need my millionth and one extra cable lol) sucks tho that the first hum eliminator I bought (also Art but over twice as expensive) did not have a ground lift.
post edited by Michelle911 - 2015/06/09 16:31:38
- My gear - M-Audio M-Track Quad - M-Audio BX8 monitors
- Intel 980x @4ghz w/24G 1800mhz Ram - Windows7 64bit Pro
- ESP FRX EII - Jackson Dinky Reverse Pro - ESP LTD F415FM 5 String Bass - M-Audio Axiom Air 49 - M-Audio Axiom 25 - Source Audio Hothand USB - Orange TH30h Amplifier w/4x12 slant Cabinet - Art SGX2000 24bit tube preamp w/X-15 Ultrafoot - Maxon OD808 Overdrive - Maxon CP101 Compressor - MXR Noise Clamp - Source Audio Soundblox Pro Polymod Filter w/ HotHand ring - Ibanez Airplane Flanger
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charlyg
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Beepster
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Michelle911 And just for posterity it's an Art Zdirect, is a passive box (which is nice, did not need my millionth and one extra cable lol) sucks tho that the first hum eliminator I bought (also Art but over twice as expensive) did not have a ground lift.
Well sheeeyote. I never venture down into this sub forum (for some stupid reason) but for some reason poked my head in today and saw this thread. I too have persistent hum issues AND have been looking for a decent, but cheap, DI/HiZ thingiemadoodle. I was going to try out the MOTU Z-Box but darned if this doesn't look much more suited to my noisy arse setup. Less expensive too. Thanks. http://www.sweetwater.com/store/detail/Zdirect
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Michelle911
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Beepster Well sheeeyote. I never venture down into this sub forum (for some stupid reason) but for some reason poked my head in today and saw this thread. I too have persistent hum issues AND have been looking for a decent, but cheap, DI/HiZ thingiemadoodle. I was going to try out the MOTU Z-Box but darned if this doesn't look much more suited to my noisy arse setup. Less expensive too. Thanks. http://www.sweetwater.com/store/detail/Zdirect
Cool, I like Art, I have a 20 year old preamp that's still kickin after some seriously heavy use throughout the years :)
- My gear - M-Audio M-Track Quad - M-Audio BX8 monitors
- Intel 980x @4ghz w/24G 1800mhz Ram - Windows7 64bit Pro
- ESP FRX EII - Jackson Dinky Reverse Pro - ESP LTD F415FM 5 String Bass - M-Audio Axiom Air 49 - M-Audio Axiom 25 - Source Audio Hothand USB - Orange TH30h Amplifier w/4x12 slant Cabinet - Art SGX2000 24bit tube preamp w/X-15 Ultrafoot - Maxon OD808 Overdrive - Maxon CP101 Compressor - MXR Noise Clamp - Source Audio Soundblox Pro Polymod Filter w/ HotHand ring - Ibanez Airplane Flanger
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Jim Roseberry
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Michelle911 I just got my hum eliminator today and plugged it all in, same hum as before... then I hit the lift ground button and heard nothing, beautiful silence! so thanks to everyone for the help :)
Glad the issue is resolved. I figured that would solve it... I use a Kemper... and when capturing profiles of real amps, there's so much cabling/gear that there's often a ground loop hum/buzz. Thankfully, the Kemper has ground-lift switches for each input and output...
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