
dgatwood
is out. Leave a message.
jabulani jonny said:dgatwood- I'd love to get your insight on the fact that lifting the ground on the Behri didn't change anything as far as the hum goes. I'm wondering if a pigtail would work, if lifting the ground didn't do anything. This is partly due to my ignorance of the issue though.
You'll recall that I said it shouldn't do anything....

There are three causes of hum that I'm aware of:
1. A device whose power supply isn't properly filtered. This device will hum even in isolation.
2. A device whose input is connected through a resistor to ground, but whose ground is floating. This occurs because in the absence of a true ground, the path of least resistance from the shield to ground is through the resistor into the input. NOTE: This requires another device electrically connected to this one (not through an optical cable). In this case, the device with a poor ground is the destination. This requires a second device with a poor ground to generate the noise.
3. A device whose shield is properly grounded, but which is attached to a device whose shield is not and which generates noise on the shield. The noise passes through the shield on the cable and induces noise on the signal line.
In case #1, the device will hum in isolation, and since it does not have a valid ground, disconnecting the ground (if there is one) won't do anything. In case #2, the device doesn't have a valid ground, so disconnecting the ground (if there is one) won't do anything. Only in case #3 will disconnecting the ground from the wall make the hum go away, because that's the only case in which the device actually had a valid ground to begin with.
Thus, if the hum went away in your case, it would mean that A. that device had a working ground, and B. the device is hooked up through a real metal cable (with a metal shield) to the device that is actually generating the hum. However, the Behringer hums in isolation, which won't occur with case #3, so lifting the ground couldn't reasonably have made the hum go away.
The problem is that the Behringer device was electrically designed for the case ground and signal ground to be grounded, but due to something wrong in the power supply, they aren't. Probably a manufacturing defect. Anyway, the pigtail should probably do the trick. It's a workaround, though. Ideally, somebody should look inside the thing and figure out what's wrong with the ground in the power supply.
Oh, just to rule out the obvious, have you tried using a different power cord?
Last edited: