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dshlapak
New member
Honest, this is about to drive me nuts.
I have an old, old, old house, with new (<10yrs) wiring. There've been problems with 60hz hum ever since we moved in, but I've finally had it. I bought a new guitar amp that is close to unusable b/c of the hum and the friggin' radio station that's coming in over it. It's not the amp--I took it back to the store and it's perfectly, beautifully, blissfully quiet when plugged into their AC. And it's not a bad cable or noisy guitar pickups or interference from a computer monitor 'cause the noise is there whether or not anything is plugged in, with or without a computer in the immediate vicinity.
I tried one of those "hum-buster" wall plugs. No good.
I tried a Furman rack-mount power conditioner. Nothing.
I tried a 3-to-2-prong adapter. No good.
I bought a PowerVar power conditioner (toroidal isolation transformer thingie) from Bobby at Mr Patchbay. No joy.
I tried all combinations of the above. No improvement.
I've tried plugging the amp into one of the dedicated, short-distance, straight-run lines we have in the house. Repeat after me..."no joy."
We're having some renovations done on the house and had an electrician in this AM. I asked him to check the main panel's grounding, hoping that maybe the whole damn house was screwed up. Well, he reports that it's "perfect." His word, not mine. Fully code-compliant, etc.
I'm not an electrician or a physicist or even particularly clever, aparently. I just want to be able to play my guitar and record without having to deal with a noise floor that's more like a ceiling. Any ideas on what the heck is going on? Anyone know a good exorcist in the Pittsburgh area?
Thanks in advance for any help.
Cheers.
--- das
I have an old, old, old house, with new (<10yrs) wiring. There've been problems with 60hz hum ever since we moved in, but I've finally had it. I bought a new guitar amp that is close to unusable b/c of the hum and the friggin' radio station that's coming in over it. It's not the amp--I took it back to the store and it's perfectly, beautifully, blissfully quiet when plugged into their AC. And it's not a bad cable or noisy guitar pickups or interference from a computer monitor 'cause the noise is there whether or not anything is plugged in, with or without a computer in the immediate vicinity.
I tried one of those "hum-buster" wall plugs. No good.
I tried a Furman rack-mount power conditioner. Nothing.
I tried a 3-to-2-prong adapter. No good.
I bought a PowerVar power conditioner (toroidal isolation transformer thingie) from Bobby at Mr Patchbay. No joy.
I tried all combinations of the above. No improvement.
I've tried plugging the amp into one of the dedicated, short-distance, straight-run lines we have in the house. Repeat after me..."no joy."
We're having some renovations done on the house and had an electrician in this AM. I asked him to check the main panel's grounding, hoping that maybe the whole damn house was screwed up. Well, he reports that it's "perfect." His word, not mine. Fully code-compliant, etc.
I'm not an electrician or a physicist or even particularly clever, aparently. I just want to be able to play my guitar and record without having to deal with a noise floor that's more like a ceiling. Any ideas on what the heck is going on? Anyone know a good exorcist in the Pittsburgh area?
Thanks in advance for any help.
Cheers.
--- das