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| BFD Forum What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum?Discuss What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? in the Subwoofer Equalization | Calibration forum; What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? I'm sorry to report that lifting the ground did not help. I desoldered the ground from the sleeve in the ... |
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| | #51 (Link) | |||
| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? I'm sorry to report that lifting the ground did not help. I desoldered the ground from the sleeve in the TRS connector plugged into the CleanBOX II, and the results were unchanged. It still generated a loud hum. Wierd. The hum I'm trying to get rid of is very low level. I can hear the hum start when I rotate the receiver volume dial up from "---" (muted) to "-70" dB. Could it simply be the noise floor of the sub pre-out of my Denon AVR-1905? I did come up with something that reduced the level of the hum by -10dB, so that its pratically inaudible at the listening positions now. I had the BFD input set to "-10 dBV" as instructed. But I had to set my reciever's sub pre-out to the minimum -12dB and it still clipped the input of the BFD with "The Haunting" in DTS at reference level. So I switched the BFD to the "+4 dBu" setting and was able to increase the receiver's pre-out level to -2 dB without clipping, and dial back 10dB on the amp. So now the hum is being amplified 10dB less, and its barely noticable. It doesn't bother my wife at all, and I only care because I tend to obsess. ![]() We are the Shack. Existence as you know it is over. We will add your biological and technological distinctiveness to our own. You will be mapped. Resistance is futile. | |||
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| | #52 (Link) | ||||
| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? Quote:
brucek | ||||
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| | #53 (Link) | |||
| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? Well, my DMC-1 and MPS-1 are both plugged into the same outlet, and if I completely decouple the grounds between the two, I have crazy noise. I found that depending on the arrangement of XLR pre-outs to amp modules, the amount of noise (and the channels, since different channels are going to different modules now) would vary. I had to decouple only some of the XLR connection grounds. So, I didn't have a ground loop either, it would seem, based on extensive troubleshooting on my own, with AV123, and from discussions with a Furman engineer. However, I did have noise that I was able to remove by lifting the ground on selective interconnects. | |||
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| | #54 (Link) | ||||
| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? Quote:
1. Without the CleanBOX II there is a very quiet hum. It might be the receiver. 2. When the CleanBOX II is introduced, there is a very loud hum. I don't know how this is being generated. The quiet hum may be generated by the receiver, but I wanted to try the isolation transformer to see if it would be eliminated that way or not. Unfortunately, the isolation transformer is introducing another problem altogether and I am no closer to a definitive diagnosis of the original problem. We are the Shack. Existence as you know it is over. We will add your biological and technological distinctiveness to our own. You will be mapped. Resistance is futile. | ||||
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| | #55 (Link) | |||
| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? I may try the original CleanBOX instead of the CleanBOX II. It converts RCA inputs to XLR outputs. Will the BFD convert an XLR input to a 1/4"TRS output? We are the Shack. Existence as you know it is over. We will add your biological and technological distinctiveness to our own. You will be mapped. Resistance is futile. | |||
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| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? Quote:
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brucek | ||||||
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| | #57 (Link) | |||
| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? Inserting the CleanBox II seems to be exactly what I experienced when I completely disconnected the processor and amp grounds from each other. I had to leave ground between at least one channel, or else everything was kaka. Have you tried rearranging which outlets your receiver and BFD plug into? Trying combinations of different outlets and same outlets might do something. It didn't do anything for me, but you might try it. One thing I was doing before with a Yamaha RX-V1400 and Outlaw Audio 7100 and Alesis DEQ-830 was to wire the chassis together using 12awg copper and then stick the last end of the copper into the ground of an empty outlet on the same power strip used by all three components. That reduced my noise by a few dB. | |||
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| | #58 (Link) | |||
| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? I'm thrilled to report that I eliminated the receiver hum completely. No, I did not solve the CleanBOX II mystery. I messed around with the BFD filters some more. I used the old fake lowpass trick by inserting a filter at 1.00 kHz, 120/60 octaves wide, down -30 dB. This obliterated whatever noise the receiver was generating, all of which was above the subwofer band. The CleanBOX II will go back. It never made sense to me either, Bruce. We are the Shack. Existence as you know it is over. We will add your biological and technological distinctiveness to our own. You will be mapped. Resistance is futile. | |||
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| | #59 (Link) | ||||
| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? Quote:
When I look at your filter (in green) I see it has almost no effect on your existing filters. That's good. The phase (in red) only effects the crossover area by about 5 degrees, so that's good. Too bad you had to go to so much trouble to track down the problem, but that happens sometimes. ![]() brucek | ||||
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| | #60 (Link) | |||
| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? The noise isn't centered on 1.00 kHz, it seems to be made up of many frequency components and I couldn't track them all down by ear. The broad cut was my attempt to kill all components of that noise wherever they were in one fell swoop, and it worked. Thanks for showing me the phase too. (Note that my filter width is two octaves and it looks like you simulated for one.) We are the Shack. Existence as you know it is over. We will add your biological and technological distinctiveness to our own. You will be mapped. Resistance is futile. | |||
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| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? Quote:
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![]() brucek | |||||
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| | #62 (Link) | ||||
| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? Quote:
![]() My crossover is at 60 Hz, that bit of phase shift is no big deal right? Should I add or subtract a foot from my receiver time delay to compensate? We are the Shack. Existence as you know it is over. We will add your biological and technological distinctiveness to our own. You will be mapped. Resistance is futile. | ||||
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| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? Quote:
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brucek | ||||||
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| | #64 (Link) | |||
| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? Interesting reading. I'm trying to eliminate my hum and would like some advice please... I have my BFD and sub plugged into the same AC outlet and I get a low hum out of the sub. Now, I am CERTAIN that the BFD is causing the hum and not my receiver, because if I remove the BFD from the chain (go straight from my receiver to my sub with the RCA) then there is no hum. What is the cheapest and simpliest way to resolve this issue? Is it really necessary to purchase a $40-50 part for this? I do not want to use a cheater plug for safety reasons. This product looks pretty basic http://www.jensen-transformers.com/ci1rr.html but I'm not sure how much it runs. Also - I read in another thread that someone connected a wire between the BFD grounding screw and a screw on their amp/pre-amp and solved the problem. I don't have that option as the sub is the only other piece of equipment near the BFD. However I was wondering if I could run a wire from the BFD grounding screw to a screw on the metal backplate on my HSU sub. Do you think that backplate is grounded? If so would this work? If there is any risk of shock or damage to the equipment trying this than I'd want to stay clear. Thanks! Edit: Just found the pricing for the Jensen - over $100 wow, that rules that out... Last edited by lovingdvd; 03-22-07 at 09:16 AM. | |||
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| | #65 (Link) | |||
| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? Also just to follow up from my post directly above - I'd like to clarify a few things please... I have this hum even when my receiver is OFF. If I unplug the INPUT RCA going into the BFD (from the receiver) then the hum stops. However if I take this same plug and go directly into my sub, I do NOT get any hum (even with the BFD still plugged into the same AC wall outlet as the sub). I also notice that once in a while the hum gets a tad louder (again with the receiver and all AV components off or even unplugged0 and the first light on the output LED array of lights blinks a bit. So it does not seem like this is an AC grounding loop. Rather the BFD is generating this hum internally. I do not remember having this issue at all once I first set this up. The hum is quite low but enough to be audible and also enough to keep the sub woofer on all the time instead of going into its passive mode when the receiver is off. Has my BFD gone bad? Or is all this par for the course, and this a perfect candidate to fix using the Jensen transformer or similar solution to resolve this? Thanks! | |||
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| | #66 (Link) | ||||
| | Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? Quote:
If that doesn’t get it, look to your cable TV service or sat dish. The CATV service and the dish should be grounded outside to the ground stake at your electrical service. Regards, Wayne | ||||
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| | #67 (Link) | ||||
| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? Quote:
Re-read your post where you say: If I unplug the INPUT RCA going into the BFD (from the receiver) then the hum stops Fairly clear indication that there is a potential difference between the Receiver and the BFD. This is standard fare and can be confirmed by testing with a cheater at the BFD. Does the hum go away. yes? then you have a ground loop. Even though the safety ground (a.k.a. third prong) is a cold conductor, it can and usually does, develop a small potential, through mutual inductance, wire resistance, etc., that can be quite different at each receptacle in your house. In addition, various other reasons (such as introducing a new ground from cable or a satellite) can cause a safety ground potential difference between chassis. For example, when you plug a receiver into one receptacle and a BDF into another receptacle, the metal cases of these two units can have a small potential difference in their safety grounds which means that these equipment's metal cases are at a slightly different potential. Since internally the AC ground is connected to the DC ground, this potential will be on the shield of an interconnect. When you connect a single ended (RCA) cable between these two devices, a small AC current can flow in the shield because of the potential difference. This unwanted signal is in the signal loop circuit and can cause a hum. An interconnect circuit has a loop path (completed circuit) that flows through the centre conductor of the interconnect cable and back on the shield. If there is an AC signal on the shield flowing because of the ground difference potential, you'll hear a hum. Breaking the safety ground of one of the two devices removes the potential and the path for the unwanted signal flow... Breaking the safety ground is dangerous though and not recommended. (See the advantage of balanced XLR circuits where you are able to safely lift the shield and the circuit remains intact on the (+)/(-) lines?). Anyway, the solution is to either find the ground loop (which is between your receiver and BFD) or safely use a transformer device that allows the signal to pass but breaks the shield. The device you indicated would achieve that end. Expensive though. Again. First prove that its a ground loop with the cheater on the BFD. Then remove it and find your solution. Try unplugging you cable. brucek Last edited by brucek; 03-22-07 at 10:01 AM. Reason: oops, Wayne beat me to the draw..... | ||||
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| | #68 (Link) | ||||
| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? Quote:
But I also had intermitent shield/ground connection problems with the RCA to phone plug adapters I was using to connect unbalenced connections to the BFD. My solution was to custom build RCA to XLR cables and experiment with different ground/shield connection possibilities with the XLR wiring. Problems were solved when I used just the + & - connections (leaving the shield/ground open) for the input to the BFD from the AVR. Did have to hook up both the - and the shield/ground for the run to the sub. Cheater plug no longer required and the XLR connections are very reliable. ![]() | ||||
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| | #69 (Link) | ||||
| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? Quote:
![]() Also a couple side notes to consider - my cable box and dvd player all have just two prongs. Wouldn't it need 3 prongs to have the ground loop issue? Also as a test I plugged my sub and the BFD into a power string, then plugged the power strip into the same AC outlet that my equipment rack is powered by. This made no difference in the hum. I also tried plugging this into various outlets and also made no difference. | ||||
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| | #70 (Link) | |||||
| | Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? Quote:
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That’s also why you still get the hum with the receiver unplugged. The ground loop is still connected through the cable feed, which ties to the cable box chassis, which connects it to the shield of the RCA cable running to the BFD and sub. Looks like what you need to do is fix that cable TV feed. It’s the problem, not the BFD. Or maybe try Bob’s XLR-to-RCA connection scheme. I’ll be happy to make those cables for you if you like – just send me the parts and supplies. Regards, Wayne | |||||
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| | #71 (Link) | ||||
| Re: What solution do folks use for the dreaded BFD hum? Quote:
My cable STB is connected to the receiver via HDMI cables. As a test I'll try removing these and some other cables to narrow things down. Or actually, better yet, I'll disconne |