TheNewSteveH
June 13th, 2012, 08:25 PM
I was playing my new head today, and I noticed it has a slight high-pitched hum that goes away when I touch the chassis. The 60 Hz noise is very low.
Any clues?
Any clues?
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Hum Vanishes When I Touch ChassisTheNewSteveH June 13th, 2012, 08:25 PM I was playing my new head today, and I noticed it has a slight high-pitched hum that goes away when I touch the chassis. The 60 Hz noise is very low. Any clues? tubeswell June 13th, 2012, 08:47 PM Most likely grounding related Keyser Soze June 14th, 2012, 12:13 AM I have no good explanation for the phenomenon. But if it were happening to me I'd be very concerned at the possibility that my body was proving a better ground source than the actual ground wire. Copper wire generally being a much better conductor than human flesh.. So, might be worthwhile to double check that connection. Also, check the actual resistance between the input jack ground connector and the chassis. With a sensitive input even a few ohms there can be problematic. Some people recommend a small value capacitor from input ground to the chassis, especially if the grounding scheme places the chassis ground point far from the input. TheNewSteveH June 14th, 2012, 11:26 AM The main ground is very sturdy, but I can look at it. My jacks are the Switchcraft type without insulating washers, so they are grounded right where they are. I have the washers, but installing them seemed like a giant pain. Maybe I'm paying the price. What's a good value for the capacitors you're talking about? Keyser Soze June 14th, 2012, 03:55 PM If your jacks are not isolated then they are already at chassis potential, both AC and DC, so a cap is unnecessary. But, if it weren't then a good value would be something like 0.01 uf. hackworth1 June 14th, 2012, 04:24 PM If you havent already got them there a 3/8" star washer is good to put behind the input jack(s) for added bite and better grounding. Just one on each jack on the inside of the chassis of course. TheNewSteveH June 14th, 2012, 06:10 PM I stuck some shielding under the chassis today. I learned that upholstery staples go through thin aluminum just fine. I have not heard the 120 Hz hum since putting the sheet down, but I haven't tested it much. I tried it with and without the guitar plugged in. I do get a little low, rumbly 60 Hz, but it's only when the volume is at over 2 o'clock. There is also a certain amount of what sounds like hiss. |
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