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![]() "Frank Gilliland" wrote in message ... On Thu, 28 Apr 2005 09:11:08 -0500, "Chad Wahls" wrote in : "Frank Gilliland" wrote in message . .. On Wed, 27 Apr 2005 10:22:40 -0500, "Chad Wahls" wrote in : snip Most often, even wahat you consider "high end" cards do not have the audio sheild grounded properly. Very good point. Some cards have shield connectors that are DC isolated from the chassis to prevent ground loops with other audio equipment. In such cards the shield is coupled to chassis ground with caps, but line noise can be a problem (and the cap must be shorted) because the caps may not large enough to fully shunt low frequencies. But the caps do shunt RF very well, and if they can keep the local AM broadcast stations out of the soundcard then the neighbor's legal CB radio shouldn't be a problem. Problem is that they don't do all that well with AM Broadcast. When I was a conglomo radio engineer we had a 50K FM and a 500W AM in a residential area. I would get complaints-o-plenty of the AM coming thru computer speakers, cheapo HT systems and phones. Sounds like we had similar jobs -- do the daily checks, fill out the daily reports, then spend the rest of the day making cables, cleaning cart machines and waiting for something to break? And spring storms... Arrrgh. Had a ground come loose once and I got the page "Chad oldie's console is on fire!" That was the worst electrical storm I have ever seen, My tower got hit 53 times in one day. I went thru an ass load of OpAmps that day! I was actually second in command, the CE was corporate, so, often in the spring and summer he was off building stations which put me in charge. It was a great relationship as the Engineering dept was least hasseled and my "boss" the CE and I are best friends. I'm still over there helping out from time to time. BEs are like farmers, always willing to help each other out, I like that! Of course we had to do what we could to eliminate the problem and usually I would pull the sound card, DC ground it with 1 ohm 1/4W resistors and the problem went away. 90% of my problems called in were ratified with proper grounding. Fortunately most of the construction in the area is newer as that tower used to be outside city limits but due to urban sprawl it is no longer. As for my personal soundcards I use pro models with a separate breakout box that's balanced. The other card in that computer and other computers in the house are SB audigy models with the mini jacks removed and XLR whips out in their place. This whip then goes to a breakout box with 6 Jensen transformers in it 4 for output and 2 for input. The mic input is shorted down permanently. I have zero noise problems, if you have an Audigy card it does sound good! You just have to help it out ![]() I use the Extigy -- it's great because you can locate the box some distance away from the noisy computer and ground it directly to the mixer. Yeah, those are great consumer cards! I went with the original audigy because they were dirt cheap at the time and sound good. My big sound card for my mastering system is a MOTU 828mkII. I love it! I recently bought it to upgrade an old Echo LAYLA, still nice but I wanted firewire. But for complaints to the station, I got them to order a huge box of 4" jumpers that have pigtails to the shield. Just plug them into the soundcard (or whatever audio equipment is getting the interference), screw the pigtail to the chassis, and 'presto' -- problem solved. No invasive surgery, and you're out of the house in a matter of minutes. Unfortunately I was across the street from the local community college, so the surrounding apartments had a lot of student housing. The kids would go home for the summer and convieninetly loose the jumpers. I had some too (jumpers) and would use them for the more established residents but for the kids I would do the solder in to keep from having to come back. I got pretty quick with it so I could be in and out fast. Took longer to explain what I was going to do than do it ![]() The transformers....... When radio engineering and upgrading EAS systems in all the stations I found that all the old receivers that we were throwing out were loaded with Jensen transformers! What a salvage find!!!!! No kidding! I had many-o-dumpster diving missions, then adopted a Chad's gotta pilfer it pile. Lots of transformers and power supplies were gutted ![]() Those old Bogen and Rauland paging amps have some pretty sweet transformers, too. One of these days we gotta exchange inventory lists of our scrounge bins. My bins are slowly deteriorating as I've been out of the loop a while but I have another build this summer I said I would help on ![]() be back in action for a while! My best find was 3 Invonics AM broadcast processors I think they are LVP201's. I was a touring sound engineer and I used one for lead vocal and 2 for squashing the drums. I would have the drums on a VCA and then send them to the "loud drums subgroup" for discretionary use. This would make the drums "louder" without chewing up subwoofers. Great for a drum solo and what it did for vocals was amazing. I got some pretty funny looks from other engineers on the road though ![]() I sold two of them to a local studio and now have one at home on my.... u guessed it.... CB ![]() the way it should be ![]() I got those units from a dumpster because they had LED's burnt out, HA! Chad |
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