Thanks everyone for your great suggestions. I will consider them all. Again, much appreciated. P.S. I'm not so sure now that this is a true ground hum problem after all. I usually listen only to a local college FM station that plays mainly jazz and classical.After trying without success the cheater plug on all components, I tried some other FM stations and the hum wasn't there. I then went back to my regular station and the hum was only there, so I thought maybe it's with the radio station.The strange thing is the hum decreases and increases in volume as I move toward and away from my amp. Then, while fiddling with my tuner( modified 1980's Sansui T-80 analog)I pushed the stereo button to mono and the hum disappeared completely. Then when pushing the button off and on repeatedly, the hum would come and go as well( mono=no hum,stereo=hum ). It was nice to finally eliminate the hum, but listening to mono is not my cup of tea. Any further suggestions ?
Please help I have a strange grounding problem
I recently bought a FIM 880 outlet and installed it myself. I plugged in my amp and cdp but I'm getting a fairly loud "humming" when I play my tuner only. I don't have dedicated outlets( I'm in the process of making this my next project)so I have my tuner plugged into a Monster Cable 2000 outlet which is in another outlet on the same wall.Both outlets are on the same line as when I shut off the breaker there is no power on this wall. The strange thing is when I unplug the cdp, the hum goes away completely.It only comes back when I plug the cdp back into the same outlet as my amp. Another weird thing is when the hum is there and I get closer to my amp, the hum increases in volume as if my body is acting as an antenna. I'm not a technical guy,but it appears to me that there is some kind of a loop and by unplugging the cdp the loop is taken out. I would surely like some advice on this new and strange situation. Thanks for your help and advice.
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- 12 posts total
- 12 posts total