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McKee
tranceaddict in training
Registered: Aug 2004
Location: Bolton, England
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this happended to me, the humming only seemed to come fom the grounding wire at the back of the mixer not being connected properly.
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Sep-09-2004 14:27
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DJ Joshua H
Senior tranceaddict
Registered: Sep 2003
Location: Boston, Massachusetts
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I had a similar problem with my mixer. Try getting an adapter that takes the 3 prong plug (+,-, ground) and turns it into a 2 prong plug minus the ground. its only a couple dollars and worked like a charm!
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Sep-09-2004 14:42
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don_q
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: Oct 2003
Location: Gator City
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I have my setup & my computer connected to my speakers. But every time I use either the other must be disconnected to prevent the common hum. 90% of all hum problems come from the electric system (power source).
___________________
http://soundcloud.com/ed_m
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Sep-10-2004 21:34
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Crystalline
Junior tranceaddict

Registered: Apr 2004
Location: San Diego, CA
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i use turntables, not cd decks...but i'm almost certain the turntables have nothing to do with it...the humming through the speakers happens the instant i turn the mixer on. if the turntables were ALREADY on before i touch the mixer, or if i turn them on AFTER the mixer is already on, or even if i disconnect them entirely, it seems to make no difference to the evil hum .
i do actually have a connector that converts RCA to minijack, so i tried plugging the mixer into the speaker input i normally use for my computer, and that also didnt do it, so at least i know its not the speaker's input, anyways. i also have RCA caps on all the unused inputs and outputs on the back of the mixer as well...
the problem may have something to do with the step-up/step-down transformer i'm using...i ordered the mixer from the uk because it was $100 cheaper, so i had to get a transformer to convert the wall's 110v to the 240v that the mixer uses. i'm certainly not an electrician, but since i'm using something like that to convert different voltages, i would personally be a little wary of bypassing the ground entirely by using a 3-prong to 2-prong adapter. could bypassing the ground cause harm to your equipment? or is it only there for safetey reasons, and the lack of it wouldn't cause any problems?
___________________
my eyes had closed before me
as i tried to hide from this sadness...
but there is nowhere to hide
in an empty world.
Last edited by Crystalline on Sep-10-2004 at 22:22
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Sep-10-2004 22:16
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xXxAzNrAvErxXx
VinylAddict
Registered: Oct 2000
Location: NYC
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I have the same problem also..the hum is very loud when I turn on my mixer. Could it be the mixer itself? I have a pioneer djm300.
___________________
Tuuuunage:
Nu Nrg - Freefall
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Sep-11-2004 16:21
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vhx1
TiT Killer
Registered: Apr 2003
Location: San Jose/L.A. CA
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What kind of mixer is it? I have a behringer djx700 and i have the same problem. what a piece of shit mixer fuck
___________________
Breaks/Prog Mix 3-15-04
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Sep-13-2004 02:12
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