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Neo Hacker
Passionate

Registered: Dec 2004
Location: Montréal
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| quote: | Originally posted by skip
i'm not expert at this. but i was wondering about balanced cables and whatnot a while ago.
someone posted these links for me to read:
http://www.rane.com/note110.html
http://www.rane.com/note151.html
they were helpful to me at least. i can't remember if they have detailed info on them what impedance balanced means but i'm sure that can be googled. it's some sort of pseudo balancing from what i gather. the main point why it is used is apparently that you can connect balanced and unbalanced cables there easily and it'll work, or something like that.
i suspect that your problem lies there somewhere. i think you have a ground loop issue between your sound card and your mixer even though you'd think you wouldn't have one because you use balanced cables.
so if the noise goes away by breaking the loop mixer out - sound card in - sound card out - mixer in, i'd say the problem is definitely there.
the connection from your sound card out to the mixer input doesn't benefit anything at all from the balanced cables as if the other end is unbalanced, the signal is going to be unbalanced. and i don't know if what i am suggesting would solve your problem, but i just have a feeling it might.
but as i said, i don't know anything about electricity and it's all pretty much a mystery to me. |
Thanks for the links, I'll take a look when I got some time.
From what I've read on Google (quick search), impedance balancing is where the hot has more signal than the cold. Compared to true balancing where the hot and cold are equals. Really, I don't understand a lot but at least it gives me tips. It's supposed to be a pseudo and less expensive balancing.
So even if A&H says that the RETURNS accepts TRS but are unbalanced, they wouldn't have a ground to connect on the ring ? Right ? I'm totally blind here so please help me out understand that 
As far as the loop you're talking about, I'm not sure. I unplugged the RETURNS and tried only the MIX2 so the only cables that were going between my soundcard and my mixer were the ouputs MIX2. There's no loop there from what I can tell. BUT, the MIX2 is impedance and I'm still trying to figure out the effects of plugging an impedance with a true balanced. I might just try these RCA to TS which is a totally non-balanced connection. BUT, the problem was there before I changed the setup and all connections were non-balanced...I was using RCA, TS and mini-jack (1/8") together to get everything working...
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Feb-20-2008 17:26
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Ryan0751
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: May 2005
Location: Boston, MA
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I don't think using balanced vs. non-balanced makes any difference as far as ground loops goes. I've had PLENTY of issues myself with those (with unbalanced connections), it's freaking annoying!
Does the ground loop exists without the mixer connected to the computer? Or is that the only factor? If it goes away with no computer connection, try using a ground-loop isolator between those two components. I had to do this connection my mixer up to my receiver in the other room, and it went away completely with an isolator.
I used this kind:
http://www.radioshack.com/product/i...rentPage=search
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Feb-20-2008 18:52
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Ryan0751
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: May 2005
Location: Boston, MA
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My place is supposedly well grounded as well... but i still have the ground loops!
One culprit I've DEFINITELY found: Telephone and/or coax cables coming into your computer. They can definitely cause a potential ground difference, because they aren't necessarily tied into your house ground.
In my place, the cable connection coming in would actually SPARK if you touched it to ground... I had to run it through a grounding block to get rid of that problem.
| quote: | Originally posted by Neo Hacker
No. Unplugging the soundcard stops the noise. I can crank the volume at maximum level on my RETURN1 and I won't get any noise. Keep in mind that this noise can only be heard on the Panasonic speakers when playing music that comes from the soundcard (FastTrack -> RETURN1). CDJs won't generate that noise. And if I unplug MIX2, I can still hear the noise coming from RETURN1 in my Panasonic. Same thing if I unplug RETURN1 I can hear the noise from MIX2 on my soundcard. I don't know if I'm clear enough...it can be hard to explain...
A ground isolator ? Let just say for a moment that my appartment is well grounded. Shouldn't the ground prevent that exactly ? If I need a ground isolator, that's because somewhere I'm having a ground problem in my appartment... no ? I'd need a ground isolator for each of my TRS (so 4x)... |
Last edited by Ryan0751 on Feb-20-2008 at 19:51
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Feb-20-2008 19:45
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