Check with Equitech tech support. They were very helpful for my questions.
Would a power conditioner stop a 60 cycle hum ?
........had an electrician stop by to see if i can get rid of a 60 cycle/ 120 cycle hum .......all outlets would need to be run off one leg into the box and grounded with a dedicated outlet to stop the noie that I have. The problem is .....the walls and celiing would need to be cut in order to connect the runs and be able to run the one line to the circuit box......that's not going to happen and that will cost a buck or two ....so would good power conditioner with all my power cords plugged into it- and then that one line that does go to the circuit box posibly clear this issue up ....need had a ground lop hum ....what a pain in the rear !!!! Thank you in advance
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Is the existing outlet grounded ? IMO, the branch circuit by itself should not be causing a 60Hz hum. You should start with you amp alone hooked up to your speakers and connect your other components one at a time to see which is causing a ground loop. An Equi=Tech conditioner is not going to be cheap, and may cost more than what the electrician would charge to install a new dedicated line or two. Their smallest Son of Q unit (1kW rated) is $1489.00. |
Garebear, I assume all your audio equipment is plugged into one duplex receptacle or maybe 2 duplex receptacles but both are fed from the same branch circuit breaker. Correct? Do you have a CATV box receiver connected to the audio system? If yes that is more than likely the problem. A difference of potential, voltage, exists between the CATV Cable Companys coax shield and the safety equipment ground of the 120V AC power system feeding your audio equipment. If you do have a CATV receiver hooked up to your audio system try disconnecting the Cable Company's Coax cable from the receiver and see if that stops the ground loop hum. If it does buy one of these. A Cable TV isolator. . |
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