
famous beagle
Well-known member
So I was recording some drum tracks today and noticed a hum when listening through headphones. Sounds kind of like 60-cycle.
I was running mics through a phantom power supply through my Tascam M-216 mixer and into the CPU. The CPU's output runs through a small Behri mixer, which is just used as a line mixer so I can use the same power amp to listen to the CPU, the Tascam mixer (when using my R2R), or my cassette 4-track without repatching.
I spent about two hours trying to track down that hum. It was not recorded on the tracks. I sent the computer’s output to my boombox aux in and listened to the tracks, and the hum wasn’t there. I also did a mic check using the Tascam mixer's pres while listening through the phones on the boombox, and the hum was not there.
So I thought, “Ok, it’s the Behringer.” So, I unplugged everything from the Behri except the power cord. Plugged a 57 mic into channel 1 and listened through the headphone jack on the Behri. Clean as a whistle! No hum. So I thought “WTF?” I plugged all the CPU output back into the Behri and then systematically replaced every cord involved: the sub outs from the Tascam mixer to the patchbay, the cords from CPU’s output to the PB, the cords from the PB to the Behri inputs, etc. I even tried swapping patch points to make sure it wasn’t the patchbay! The hum never went away.
So I don’t know what the hell. When I listen to the CPU by itself (through the boombox, for instance), there’s no hum. When I listen to the Behri all by itself (just a mic plugged straight into it), there’s no hum. But when I listen to the CPU through the Behri, there’s hum. Problems like this drive me f-ing nuts!
The good news is that it’s not ending up on the recording, so when we actually record, we can just send the output straight to the power amp/phones and bypass the Behri altogether.
It’s really weird, though, because I just recorded a bunch of ukulele tracks for this book I wrote, and I listened from the CPU through the Behri, and I don’t remember hearing this hum at all. And I was using the same signal chain: mic into phantom supply into Tascam into CPU. It’s possible that the hum was there and was just masked by the AC noise or something. I let the AC run while I was recording the uke and used a noise removal plug-in to get rid of the background noise. (It worked pretty well too.)
I don’t know. Anyway, hopefully something will reveal itself. It’s an annoying problem. Anyone got any ideas that I haven’t thought of?
Thanks
I was running mics through a phantom power supply through my Tascam M-216 mixer and into the CPU. The CPU's output runs through a small Behri mixer, which is just used as a line mixer so I can use the same power amp to listen to the CPU, the Tascam mixer (when using my R2R), or my cassette 4-track without repatching.
I spent about two hours trying to track down that hum. It was not recorded on the tracks. I sent the computer’s output to my boombox aux in and listened to the tracks, and the hum wasn’t there. I also did a mic check using the Tascam mixer's pres while listening through the phones on the boombox, and the hum was not there.
So I thought, “Ok, it’s the Behringer.” So, I unplugged everything from the Behri except the power cord. Plugged a 57 mic into channel 1 and listened through the headphone jack on the Behri. Clean as a whistle! No hum. So I thought “WTF?” I plugged all the CPU output back into the Behri and then systematically replaced every cord involved: the sub outs from the Tascam mixer to the patchbay, the cords from CPU’s output to the PB, the cords from the PB to the Behri inputs, etc. I even tried swapping patch points to make sure it wasn’t the patchbay! The hum never went away.
So I don’t know what the hell. When I listen to the CPU by itself (through the boombox, for instance), there’s no hum. When I listen to the Behri all by itself (just a mic plugged straight into it), there’s no hum. But when I listen to the CPU through the Behri, there’s hum. Problems like this drive me f-ing nuts!
The good news is that it’s not ending up on the recording, so when we actually record, we can just send the output straight to the power amp/phones and bypass the Behri altogether.
It’s really weird, though, because I just recorded a bunch of ukulele tracks for this book I wrote, and I listened from the CPU through the Behri, and I don’t remember hearing this hum at all. And I was using the same signal chain: mic into phantom supply into Tascam into CPU. It’s possible that the hum was there and was just masked by the AC noise or something. I let the AC run while I was recording the uke and used a noise removal plug-in to get rid of the background noise. (It worked pretty well too.)
I don’t know. Anyway, hopefully something will reveal itself. It’s an annoying problem. Anyone got any ideas that I haven’t thought of?
Thanks