Does anyone else have problems with a ground hum with a Halo amp? I didn't have it on my two channel system but when I swapped it into the HT system it appears. It is the loudest hum I have ever hear. I swapped amp positions with the ARC and the hum followed the A23. I tried replacing cables, re-routing cables, the ground lift switch. I didn't see a stud for attaching a case ground. The components are isolated on wood shelves.
A23 Hum
Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
-
Do you have a cable box in your system? If so, try unhooking the cable and see if the hum goes away. If that helps, then purchase a Jensen VRD-1FF cable isolator. You can for instance find them on eBay ($15-$45).Originally posted by Pookie007Does anyone else have problems with a ground hum with a Halo amp? I didn't have it on my two channel system but when I swapped it into the HT system it appears. It is the loudest hum I have ever hear. I swapped amp positions with the ARC and the hum followed the A23. I tried replacing cables, re-routing cables, the ground lift switch. I didn't see a stud for attaching a case ground. The components are isolated on wood shelves.
If you don't have cable, then the other possible problem might be that you have your gear hooked up on different electrical circuits. Try unplugging the power cord of gear sitting on different circuits (video projector, powered subwoofers, etc.). If the equipment causing the problem is grounded, a $0.99 cheater plug from Lowe's hardware will probably solve the problem.
If you still can't find the problem, do it the other way around. Unhook everything. Start with amp+preamp only. Then hook up one unit at a time and test in between every moment. That will identify the source of the hum.
The ground switch on the Parasound amps is useless. It does not disconnect the chassis from ground as is implied. If the amp hums with nothing but the preamp connected, you should try a cheater plug on the amp.
Peter- Bottom
-
Not odd at all. It just indicates that the AR amps don't have any electrical connection between power ground and signal ground. (Different design).Originally posted by Pookie007The odd thing was I don't have any sort of hum with my Audio Research amps.
Peter- Bottom
Comment
-
I solved my hum with my sat rcvr by connecting speaker wire between the metal chassis of the amp and the sat box. Much cheaper than buying anything from Monster
-Mike- Bottom
Comment
-
I had the voltage regulator already. I just never needed to use the cable filter before. My initial plan was to ground the chassis together, but the Parasound didn't have a grounding nut and I didn't want to remove any of the other screws.- Bottom
Comment
-
Yeah, but still not as good as buing a true isolator like the Jensen I suggested. (I don't know what the Monster products do. If they provide full isolation, great! However, it is possible that the only ground the cable).Originally posted by mikepinkertonI solved my hum with my sat rcvr by connecting speaker wire between the metal chassis of the amp and the sat box. Much cheaper than buying anything from Monster
-Mike
Did you see any detoriation in the cable signal (check all channels) ? When doing simple grounding to solve the problem, you move the potental differences from your equipment to the cable wire...
A true isolator is the safest solution IMHO.
Peter- Bottom
Comment
-
I got a catalog from Sweetwater last week (pro recording gear) and they had a plug that they claim would cure ground-loop hum without defeating the ground (as all 2prong plugs do).
I can put up a link if you're curious. I still am satisfied with my speaker solution, tying the two grounds together. *shrug*
-Mike- Bottom
Comment
-
I am not sure how it did it, but the Monster Power HTS 3600 Power Center solved the hum problem. It has some sort of filtering shown on the mimic bus for coax connections.
My cable signal strength is fine. I have digital cable and all channels are working fine. I also ordered pay-per-view this weekend, so I have two way communication working also. There has been no problems at all. I was shocked at how hot the Halo amps run compared to the ARC.- Bottom
Comment
Related Topics
Collapse
-
by boeI was worried about potential damage caused by spikes in the cable TV line so I plugged into the in(made sure it isn't the out) on my HTS 5000. The hum on my subwoofer significantly increases when I do this.
Any suggestions?
Thanks-
Channel: Select Manufacturer Clubs
-
-
by SauravWell, weird for me, at least. I got a PE plate amp some time back, and it's hummed from the first day I've hard it. Recently I spent some time trying to narrow it down. Here's what I know so far:
* There's no video/cable in the system, and I added power strips and cables so everything...-
Channel: Mission Possible DIY
-
-
by chanlonAny of you folks find the Rotel 1570 prone to experiencing Ground Loop Hums?
Seems that the Oppo BDP-95 connected via multi-channel analog creates the ground loop with the Rotel processor. If I disconnect the RCA cables, the ground loop disappears. If I use a cheater plug on the Oppo,...-
Channel: Club Rotel
-
-
by HoffaHello all! I just got an A52 off audiogon. Anyways, not matter what I can't seem to get rid of the hum/buzz feedback. I have tried almost everything that has been recommended here.
1. Disconnect EVERYTHING.... amp plugged into wall, everything (that i know) off on the circuit, just speakers...-
Channel: Club Halo/Parasound
-
-
by rhoffman000I'm a happy new owner of a 1095. Problem is that my cable line is introducing a pretty strong hum. I know it can be defeated with a 2-prong cheater plug, but I understand that this creates some concern for safety. I live in a NYC apartment, so it's unlikely I can really get the cable guys out here...-
Channel: Club Rotel
-
- Loading...
- No more items.

Comment