Noise and interferrence.

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PMJ

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I have jus currently made the switch from hardware to pc... I upgraded my mixer and amplfier for my studio monitors, but now its seems like I am getting a grip of dirty noise in my sound..... When I turn the volume up, I can hear interferrence from the harddrive of the pc and when I move the mouse it is really noticable.. With my hardware, I never had this problem, but now it seems to be an issue.. I tried to plug the mixer in a separte power strip of what the pc is plugged into, stilll nothing changes.. and I've checked my cables for cracks and tears, but I did not notice anything with those either.. Is there something else I can try?

I am using an Audigy Sound blaster card.. I know there are not the hottest pic of home studios, but Ive used it on my older pc w/o no issues as far as interferrence with sound... etc..

I Have my sound running through whats below if that helps..

Alesis MultiMix 6FX 6-Channel
Alesis Monitor One MK2 Studio Monitors
Alesis RA300 Power Amp


Thanks, PM
 
I've got an RME card which I believe is good quality and I also get certain noises, especially when I move my mouse cursor across the screen. It can be a little distracting but if music is playing, while mixing or just listening, then I can't hear anything. And I never get any of that noise getting into my recording sessions which is the most important thing IMO.

Personally, I wouldn't worry too much about it. Just run some tests to make sure that it's not making it onto your tracks by burning a CD and playing it on your hi-fi or something.


andy
 
thanks... I think my deal is the same as yours.. I recorded a little sample and then played it on another source and I cant hear the noise.. My guess its in the monitoring system.. I jus bought and put in an alesis amplifier to my system and I think that may be the device picking up the pc's noise...

thanks for sharing ya deal..

PM
 
PMJ said:
I have jus currently made the switch from hardware to pc... I upgraded my mixer and amplfier for my studio monitors, but now its seems like I am getting a grip of dirty noise in my sound..... When I turn the volume up, I can hear interferrence from the harddrive of the pc and when I move the mouse it is really noticable.. With my hardware, I never had this problem, but now it seems to be an issue.. I tried to plug the mixer in a separte power strip of what the pc is plugged into, stilll nothing changes.. and I've checked my cables for cracks and tears, but I did not notice anything with those either.. Is there something else I can try?

I am using an Audigy Sound blaster card.. I know there are not the hottest pic of home studios, but Ive used it on my older pc w/o no issues as far as interferrence with sound... etc..

Most problems like this are caused by:

A. An improperly designed computer power supply whose ground rails aren't sufficiently grounded.
B. An improperly designed sound card that doesn't have proper power filtering capacitors on the power rails.
C. An improperly designed motherboard that doesn't have proper power filtering capacitors on the PCI slots.

My advice: start with a better sound card, and if that doesn't help, replace the power supply with a better one. That way if the first thing you replace doesn't solve the problem, you won't have wasted your money, as you'll still have a better sound card....

If it's a poorly grounded power supply, you might also be able to fix the problem through ground bussing---solder a heavy (say 10 AWG stranded) wire to the shield on a plug and plug it into an unused jack on some piece of audio gear (or slip a terminal spade under an unpainted case screw if you don't have any empty jacks). Take the other end of this ground wire and hook it directly to the ground pin on a power plug and plug it into a wall socket. (WARNING: Don't attempt anything like this unless you know what you're doing.)

If it's a crappy motherboard... well... not much you can do about bad power filtering (without replacing the motherboard, of course) except to switch to an external, non-bus-powered audio interface like a FireBox or something and use a 6->4 and 4->6 adapter pair so that the power wires aren't connected across between the interface and the computer. That generally takes care of even the most extreme problems.

In fact, it might be worth considering an external interface for that very reason....


PMJ said:
I recorded a little sample and then played it on another source and I cant hear the noise.. My guess its in the monitoring system.

Depends on what you mean. In the output portion of the audio card... probably. In the amplifier... doubtful. Unless the problem continues to occur after you disconnect the computer from the outboard audio gear, there's very little chance that it is being picked up by that gear out of the air. In fact, there's very little chance of that anyway unless it's a home-built computer. The FCC would have the @$$es of any computer manufacturer that let that kind of leakage pass.... :D
 
I used to use a Sound Balster for recording but it was very Noisy but as soon as I switched to the Delta 44 then noise totally dissapeared and the audio Quality was Much better.....

I suggest upgradeing your sound card as there is no use haveing all that Nice equipment when your sound Card is ruining the Quality of your recordings as your Sound Card is the weakest Link in your recording set up....

Cheers
 
Minion said:
I used to use a Sound Balster for recording but it was very Noisy but as soon as I switched to the Delta 44 then noise totally dissapeared and the audio Quality was Much better.....

I suggest upgradeing your sound card as there is no use haveing all that Nice equipment when your sound Card is ruining the Quality of your recordings as your Sound Card is the weakest Link in your recording set up....

Cheers

Second that. I had the same thing with the mouse-noise on my soundblaster. I bought an audiophile 24/96 and I'm happy as can be. Good luck.
 
Okay, so if I order an M-Audio or something to that affect..? Yeah, Ive only done test recordings with my Shure 58 vs. My Rode NTK, so I havent really had the chance to hear what kind of quality Im gonna get. But, I'd jus rather buy a new card before I start getting to the point of "trying to make what I have work"... Im jus so new with pcs Ive never felt so lost when it comes to home recording in the past 9 yrs I've been doing this... I feel outdated :D ... But thats good point..

Thanks fellahs..
 
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