
July 9th 08, 08:42 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
earth loop problem
Just started to get an earth loop using my laptop as source connected
to amp.
just starte
get 'cricket' type sounds when the laptop is connected to power lead.
problem goes totally when i half remove the power lead,
gets unlistenable when the power lead is removed and laptop running on
battery.
only just started happening, any ideas?
|

July 9th 08, 09:01 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
earth loop problem
philcud wrote:
Just started to get an earth loop using my laptop as source connected
to amp.
just starte
get 'cricket' type sounds when the laptop is connected to power lead.
problem goes totally when i half remove the power lead,
gets unlistenable when the power lead is removed and laptop running on
battery.
only just started happening, any ideas?
If it gets to a point where you can hear it running on just battery
power, it's not a ground loop, it's a defect inside the laptop.
On the other hand, if it goes away totally when you run on battery, then
you may have a power brick problem. Try another power brick if you've
got one available.
It's *possible* your battery is defective, which is causing the power
supply on the motherboard in the laptop to become unstable, causing the
sound to chirp.
--
Tciao for Now!
John.
|

July 10th 08, 06:11 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
earth loop problem
John Williamson wrote:
philcud wrote:
Just started to get an earth loop using my laptop as source connected
to amp.
just starte
get 'cricket' type sounds when the laptop is connected to power lead.
problem goes totally when i half remove the power lead,
gets unlistenable when the power lead is removed and laptop running on
battery.
only just started happening, any ideas?
If it gets to a point where you can hear it running on just battery
power, it's not a ground loop, it's a defect inside the laptop.
Agreed.
On the other hand, if it goes away totally when you run on battery, then
you may have a power brick problem. Try another power brick if you've
got one available.
It's inherent in almost every power brick. Laptops weren't designed as
quality audio sources, whatever the marketing says.
It's *possible* your battery is defective, which is causing the power
supply on the motherboard in the laptop to become unstable, causing the
sound to chirp.
Pretty long shot but you never know. I'd lay my money more on the internal
voltage regulators if it's in that area.
Graham
|

July 9th 08, 11:27 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
earth loop problem
In article
,
philcud wrote:
Just started to get an earth loop using my laptop as source connected
to amp.
just starte
get 'cricket' type sounds when the laptop is connected to power lead.
problem goes totally when i half remove the power lead,
gets unlistenable when the power lead is removed and laptop running on
battery.
only just started happening, any ideas?
Earth loops occur when there are two ground paths at different potentials.
Usually the screen of the interconnecting cable and mains earths via the
mains plug. And takes the form of hum. If you are running the laptop on
batteries with the power supply disconnected totally it can't be an earth
loop.
--
*If at first you don't succeed, avoid skydiving.*
Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
|

July 10th 08, 06:11 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
earth loop problem
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote:
In article
,
philcud wrote:
Just started to get an earth loop using my laptop as source connected
to amp.
just starte
get 'cricket' type sounds when the laptop is connected to power lead.
problem goes totally when i half remove the power lead,
gets unlistenable when the power lead is removed and laptop running on
battery.
only just started happening, any ideas?
Earth loops occur when there are two ground paths at different potentials.
Usually the screen of the interconnecting cable and mains earths via the
mains plug. And takes the form of hum. If you are running the laptop on
batteries with the power supply disconnected totally it can't be an earth
loop.
Very true.
Graham
|

July 10th 08, 06:44 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
earth loop problem
Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article
,
philcud wrote:
Just started to get an earth loop using my laptop as source connected
to amp.
just starte
get 'cricket' type sounds when the laptop is connected to power lead.
problem goes totally when i half remove the power lead,
gets unlistenable when the power lead is removed and laptop running on
battery.
only just started happening, any ideas?
Earth loops occur when there are two ground paths at different potentials.
Usually the screen of the interconnecting cable and mains earths via the
mains plug. And takes the form of hum. If you are running the laptop on
batteries with the power supply disconnected totally it can't be an earth
loop.
Could the problem be that there is no earth in the system
rather than too many?
--
Eiron.
|

July 10th 08, 06:48 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
earth loop problem
Eiron wrote:
Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article
,
philcud wrote:
Just started to get an earth loop using my laptop as source connected
to amp.
just starte
get 'cricket' type sounds when the laptop is connected to power lead.
problem goes totally when i half remove the power lead,
gets unlistenable when the power lead is removed and laptop running on
battery.
only just started happening, any ideas?
Earth loops occur when there are two ground paths at different
potentials.
Usually the screen of the interconnecting cable and mains earths via the
mains plug. And takes the form of hum. If you are running the laptop on
batteries with the power supply disconnected totally it can't be an earth
loop.
Could the problem be that there is no earth in the system
rather than too many?
Never a problem. You don't get hum problems with battery-powered gear.
d
|

July 10th 08, 07:00 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
earth loop problem
Don Pearce wrote:
Eiron wrote:
Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article
,
philcud wrote:
Just started to get an earth loop using my laptop as source connected
to amp.
just starte
get 'cricket' type sounds when the laptop is connected to power lead.
problem goes totally when i half remove the power lead,
gets unlistenable when the power lead is removed and laptop running on
battery.
only just started happening, any ideas?
Earth loops occur when there are two ground paths at different
potentials.
Usually the screen of the interconnecting cable and mains earths via the
mains plug. And takes the form of hum. If you are running the laptop on
batteries with the power supply disconnected totally it can't be an
earth
loop.
Could the problem be that there is no earth in the system
rather than too many?
Never a problem. You don't get hum problems with battery-powered gear.
And what's the amplifier powered by?
--
Eiron.
|

July 10th 08, 07:05 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
earth loop problem
Eiron wrote:
Don Pearce wrote:
Eiron wrote:
Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article
,
philcud wrote:
Just started to get an earth loop using my laptop as source connected
to amp.
just starte
get 'cricket' type sounds when the laptop is connected to power lead.
problem goes totally when i half remove the power lead,
gets unlistenable when the power lead is removed and laptop running on
battery.
only just started happening, any ideas?
Earth loops occur when there are two ground paths at different
potentials.
Usually the screen of the interconnecting cable and mains earths via
the
mains plug. And takes the form of hum. If you are running the laptop on
batteries with the power supply disconnected totally it can't be an
earth
loop.
Could the problem be that there is no earth in the system
rather than too many?
Never a problem. You don't get hum problems with battery-powered gear.
And what's the amplifier powered by?
Doesn't matter. You only connect to earth for safety.
d
|

July 10th 08, 09:31 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
|
|
earth loop problem
In article ,
Eiron wrote:
Earth loops occur when there are two ground paths at different
potentials. Usually the screen of the interconnecting cable and mains
earths via the mains plug. And takes the form of hum. If you are
running the laptop on batteries with the power supply disconnected
totally it can't be an earth loop.
Could the problem be that there is no earth in the system
rather than too many?
If there's no ground connection between the two using unbalanced
connection you'll not get any signal either.
--
*If a parsley farmer is sued, can they garnish his wages?
Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
|
Thread Tools |
|
Display Modes |
Hybrid Mode
|
|