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| Amp Central Station Amps, tubes, speakers & everything AMP related. |
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#1 (permalink) |
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Tele-Holic
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Pro Junior -radio sounds!
Hi guys,
I've just purchased a brand new Pro Junior. Sounded great in shop. But once home and plugged in I get a whole load of radio sounds and humming like you would'nt believe, arhh! I have a broadcasting building close by which I'm thinking could be the problem. Am I write in thinking this is the problem and what the heck can I do about it other then move house? |
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#7 (permalink) |
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TDPRI Member
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Corpus Christi, TX
Age: 28
Posts: 43
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I saw a band play locally one night and when the bass player wasn't playing between songs (Old Peavey?) amp, waves of Tejano music could be heard. Made things interesting.
__________________
"If it ain't chartreuse, it ain't no use" -Uncle Lefty |
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#8 (permalink) | |
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Tele-Meister
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Leafs Nation
Age: 48
Posts: 132
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#9 (permalink) | |
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Poster Extraordinaire
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Lost Angeles and Orange County
Posts: 7,128
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Quote:
It's the nature of amps - especially in the modern world. I've built amps with shielded input/preamp wiring and it still happens ocassionally. I've used shielded pickuards - still get it sometimes. It's pretty rare compared to the amount of gigs that don't tune in Tokyo. Who knows, maybe power conditioners, ground lifts, etc, etc would actually help - but I'd rather save my money for booze and just play the club with what I've got, as well as the tejano radio backing me up (maybe it'll help my sound! HAHAHA). As far as wah's go... there is some interesting things that happen there. Don't remember if it's the inductor or what, but in some cases it's unavoidable... do some searches on wahs, I don't even know if the techs understand the wah/radio mystery. |
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#11 (permalink) |
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Tele-Meister
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: London
Age: 24
Posts: 243
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as a simple idea - have you considered that quality of your guitar chord? I've played a few chords that have been able to pick up radio interference quite a bit...
When you hear the amp picking up radio waves, unplug everything from the amp and see if it is still happenning. If it is, then something in the amp likely needs shielding (I don't really know my amp tech stuff...). If the interference stops, then it's something in your signal path - not the amp itself. And yeah, wah pedals are fantastic at picking up the radio. I had a wah once that I could use (with a bad chord) to scroll through radio stations with my foot. That was quite something. |
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#12 (permalink) |
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Tele-Holic
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Hey I've just turned the amp on without any guitar chords/leads plugged in and yeah there's no radio sounds at all.
Lead back in- The guitar chord/lead I use is a Monster. This is a pretty nice lead. I've tried various other leads I have of mixed quality and it's still there. Maybe I need to think about sheilding my Teles somehow? But anyhow this amp is really my gigging amp- way to load for my apartment, the place shakes when I crank it. Neighbours are use to shaking houses due to being in an earthquake zone. The loud sounds might be pushing it though! I still think living next to a broadcasting station with a whopping great radio mast on top can't help the situation. I have a 15R Fender Frontman which doesn't get any of this problem. Is there a difference between solid and valve when it comes to radio noise? Last edited by daviddoubleu; November 24th, 2006 at 01:46 AM. |
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#13 (permalink) | |
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Poster Extraordinaire
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: Lost Angeles and Orange County
Posts: 7,128
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Quote:
There are some fine articles here on how to do it right. Search for em. Pickup cavities. Ground the shielding by making it contact a grounded connection (control plate etc). It's cheap and should do the trick. |
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