![]() |
The whine of usb audio interfaces
I was looking to find a simple answer to this issue, which seems to afflict
any usb sound device I use to connect to an analogue source. I did try the internal card also, but that suffers from swooshes and other weird noises due to it being inside a busy computer one assumes. In the majority of cases the while is constant, though can vary if other things are going on in the machine. it seems to only be on the output sockets, and the input both line level seem pretty good. This does not seem logical to me, but I've been told in the main its because of the earth return through the usb and the one through the mains are different impedances effectively modulating the supply. I did find a special psu that supposedly fixes this sort off thing with a breaker in the earth in the us be cable supplying isolated power only down the line. However most of these seem to be several times the cost of the interface. I did wonder about a powered hub, but have been told this will not work. Brian -- ----- - This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please! |
The whine of usb audio interfaces
On Sun, 12 Feb 2017 20:50:07 -0000, "Brian Gaff"
wrote: I was looking to find a simple answer to this issue, which seems to afflict any usb sound device I use to connect to an analogue source. I did try the internal card also, but that suffers from swooshes and other weird noises due to it being inside a busy computer one assumes. In the majority of cases the while is constant, though can vary if other things are going on in the machine. it seems to only be on the output sockets, and the input both line level seem pretty good. This does not seem logical to me, but I've been told in the main its because of the earth return through the usb and the one through the mains are different impedances effectively modulating the supply. I did find a special psu that supposedly fixes this sort off thing with a breaker in the earth in the us be cable supplying isolated power only down the line. However most of these seem to be several times the cost of the interface. I did wonder about a powered hub, but have been told this will not work. Brian I've never come across this problem. Can you give more detail about your system? d --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
The whine of usb audio interfaces
In article , Don Pearce
wrote: On Sun, 12 Feb 2017 20:50:07 -0000, "Brian Gaff" wrote: I was looking to find a simple answer to this issue, which seems to afflict any usb sound device I use to connect to an analogue source. I did try the internal card also, but that suffers from swooshes and other weird noises due to it being inside a busy computer one assumes. In the majority of cases the while is constant, though can vary if other things are going on in the machine. it seems to only be on the output sockets, and the input both line level seem pretty good. This does not seem logical to me, but I've been told in the main its because of the earth return through the usb and the one through the mains are different impedances effectively modulating the supply. I did find a special psu that supposedly fixes this sort off thing with a breaker in the earth in the us be cable supplying isolated power only down the line. However most of these seem to be several times the cost of the interface. I did wonder about a powered hub, but have been told this will not work. Brian I've never come across this problem. Can you give more detail about your system? IIRC Brian is using one of the cheap USB Audio devices that tend to pick up any crap on their USB power line, etc. No idea who told him an externally powered hub "will not work". I found that a decent one could make a difference when using a 25 quid USB DAC/ADC. As does buying a better ADC or DAC in the first place! Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
The whine of usb audio interfaces
Hi Brian,
You don't mention which unit you have, but I'm using a Behringer UCA202 feeding a home-brew headphone amp. There's no apparent background noise at all. I'm using a quite good quality lead between the Behringer and the amp to prevent noise being introduced here. I've not got any sort of fancy power supply or earthing arrangement. |
The whine of usb audio interfaces
In article om, mick
wrote: Hi Brian, You don't mention which unit you have, but I'm using a Behringer UCA202 feeding a home-brew headphone amp. There's no apparent background noise at all. I'm using a quite good quality lead between the Behringer and the amp to prevent noise being introduced here. I've not got any sort of fancy power supply or earthing arrangement. Brian mentioned his having a ground terminal. The UCA202 I have doesn't provide one of those. So he may have a variant that includes an RIAA preamp. However when I tested the 202 it seemed OK *provided* the power supply to it via USB was reasonably good. Changing lead here didn't seem to make any difference - by measurement or listening. We'd probably need more specific details of what Brian is doing to take this much further. Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
The whine of usb audio interfaces
On 13/02/2017 15:26, Jim Lesurf wrote:
In article om, mick wrote: Hi Brian, You don't mention which unit you have, but I'm using a Behringer UCA202 feeding a home-brew headphone amp. There's no apparent background noise at all. I'm using a quite good quality lead between the Behringer and the amp to prevent noise being introduced here. I've not got any sort of fancy power supply or earthing arrangement. Brian mentioned his having a ground terminal. The UCA202 I have doesn't provide one of those. So he may have a variant that includes an RIAA preamp. The UFO202 has line/phono input and a ground terminal. If using a laptop it can help to disconnect the power and do your work on battery. And also checking the earthing. One path to earth is better than none or several. -- Eiron. |
The whine of usb audio interfaces
On 2017-02-13 16:03:55 +0000, Eiron said:
On 13/02/2017 15:26, Jim Lesurf wrote: In article om, mick wrote: Hi Brian, You don't mention which unit you have, but I'm using a Behringer UCA202 feeding a home-brew headphone amp. There's no apparent background noise at all. I'm using a quite good quality lead between the Behringer and the amp to prevent noise being introduced here. I've not got any sort of fancy power supply or earthing arrangement. Brian mentioned his having a ground terminal. The UCA202 I have doesn't provide one of those. So he may have a variant that includes an RIAA preamp. The UFO202 has line/phono input and a ground terminal. If using a laptop it can help to disconnect the power and do your work on battery. And also checking the earthing. One path to earth is better than none or several. When I had this problem some while ago between an iMac and a fixed HiFi system using an M-Audio DAC, I guessed that it was an earth loop problem and tried transformer coupling the audio. That cured it. I believe that this whine is a quite common problem and there are readily available USB isolators that will break the earth connection on the USB lead. Arthur -- real email arthur at bellacat dot com |
The whine of usb audio interfaces
Yes there are, but at ridiculous prices considering the price of the
interface. With regard to the interface. They are all very similar and all offer the line in/out option some have pick up level switches, the ones with the earth terminal, some have a digital input again switched, but the innards are based around the same chipset. The interesting thing is that the sound is on the output not the input side Now on another machine we hear the odd crackle coming through the output side on the same or similar interfaces, again not recorded, so I'm just wondering if the output analogue amp is slightly more susceptible to psu noise than the input is. If this is the case then some kind of powered hub with a decent usb psu, perhaps an analogue one might fix it. Brian -- ----- - This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please! "Arthur Quinn" wrote in message ... On 2017-02-13 16:03:55 +0000, Eiron said: On 13/02/2017 15:26, Jim Lesurf wrote: In article om, mick wrote: Hi Brian, You don't mention which unit you have, but I'm using a Behringer UCA202 feeding a home-brew headphone amp. There's no apparent background noise at all. I'm using a quite good quality lead between the Behringer and the amp to prevent noise being introduced here. I've not got any sort of fancy power supply or earthing arrangement. Brian mentioned his having a ground terminal. The UCA202 I have doesn't provide one of those. So he may have a variant that includes an RIAA preamp. The UFO202 has line/phono input and a ground terminal. If using a laptop it can help to disconnect the power and do your work on battery. And also checking the earthing. One path to earth is better than none or several. When I had this problem some while ago between an iMac and a fixed HiFi system using an M-Audio DAC, I guessed that it was an earth loop problem and tried transformer coupling the audio. That cured it. I believe that this whine is a quite common problem and there are readily available USB isolators that will break the earth connection on the USB lead. Arthur -- real email arthur at bellacat dot com |
The whine of usb audio interfaces
In article , Arthur Quinn
wrote: When I had this problem some while ago between an iMac and a fixed HiFi system using an M-Audio DAC, I guessed that it was an earth loop problem and tried transformer coupling the audio. That cured it. I believe that this whine is a quite common problem and there are readily available USB isolators that will break the earth connection on the USB lead. The difficulty here is that there are actually various causes and ways the symptoms can manifest, and they have different solutions and mechanisms. Knowing *exactly* what is meant by "whine", and the relevant circumstances may help diagnosis. Note, for example, the oddity in what Brian said initially: On 12 Feb in uk.rec.audio, Brian Gaff wrote: it seems to only be on the output sockets, and the input both line level seem pretty good. This does not seem logical to me, but I've been told in the main its because of the earth return through the usb and the one through the mains are different impedances effectively modulating the supply. Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
The whine of usb audio interfaces
On 02/13/2017 03:01 PM, mick wrote:
Hi Brian, You don't mention which unit you have, but I'm using a Behringer UCA202 feeding a home-brew headphone amp. There's no apparent background noise at all. I'm using a quite good quality lead between the Behringer and the amp to prevent noise being introduced here. I've not got any sort of fancy power supply or earthing arrangement. I wonder if the OPs issue is an earth loop issue, perhaps combined with switch mode PSU noise? I've had horrendous noise when feeding a laptop or netbook to an amp. Run off battery and the problem goes away. Adding audio isolation transformers also makes the problem go away. I could have posted this anywhere in this thread, but here is a good place. In your example of the headphone amp is it run from batteries or from a floating, ie not earth referenced, PSU? Pete |
The whine of usb audio interfaces
Well lett me add some detail. The whine actually drops to almost nothing at
all when software is loading. It is more or less constant when nothing much other than listening to internet radio is going on, and this includes actually recording audio. The audio if moved to a ram stick then played in an mp3 player has no whine, only the sound through the phonos on the sound interface have it. My feeling is that its something to do with the samsung solid state drive in the computer, as at our talking newspaper a similar machine is there with a conventional hard drive and it gives no whine at all, but does suffer from the sort of crackle one might expect to hear on the mains, for example again only on the output. The isolated power devices seem to cost anything from nearly 50 quid up as high as your budget will go, no doubt with oxygen free cables and gold plated everything supplied by russ Andrews. However if the sound is just coming up the psu line surely any decent powered usb hum should fix it assuming the 5v supply its derived from is not one of those really crude Chinese devices that generates rfi on all bands and no doubt nasty noises on the output as well. This is why I was looking for something analogue and perhaps with simple voltage regulation and smoothing not switch mode. Brian -- ----- - This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please! "Jim Lesurf" wrote in message ... In article , Arthur Quinn wrote: When I had this problem some while ago between an iMac and a fixed HiFi system using an M-Audio DAC, I guessed that it was an earth loop problem and tried transformer coupling the audio. That cured it. I believe that this whine is a quite common problem and there are readily available USB isolators that will break the earth connection on the USB lead. The difficulty here is that there are actually various causes and ways the symptoms can manifest, and they have different solutions and mechanisms. Knowing *exactly* what is meant by "whine", and the relevant circumstances may help diagnosis. Note, for example, the oddity in what Brian said initially: On 12 Feb in uk.rec.audio, Brian Gaff wrote: it seems to only be on the output sockets, and the input both line level seem pretty good. This does not seem logical to me, but I've been told in the main its because of the earth return through the usb and the one through the mains are different impedances effectively modulating the supply. Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
The whine of usb audio interfaces
Well its one of that series certainly, read my reply to the last post for
more details. Brian -- ----- - This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please! "Peter Chant" wrote in message ... On 02/13/2017 03:01 PM, mick wrote: Hi Brian, You don't mention which unit you have, but I'm using a Behringer UCA202 feeding a home-brew headphone amp. There's no apparent background noise at all. I'm using a quite good quality lead between the Behringer and the amp to prevent noise being introduced here. I've not got any sort of fancy power supply or earthing arrangement. I wonder if the OPs issue is an earth loop issue, perhaps combined with switch mode PSU noise? I've had horrendous noise when feeding a laptop or netbook to an amp. Run off battery and the problem goes away. Adding audio isolation transformers also makes the problem go away. I could have posted this anywhere in this thread, but here is a good place. In your example of the headphone amp is it run from batteries or from a floating, ie not earth referenced, PSU? Pete |
All times are GMT. The time now is 02:06 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0
Copyright ©2004-2006 AudioBanter.co.uk