philby1 wrote:Yes. Having done this test using three different guitar leads, the result does produce the following: Plugging in (but not touching the end) produces a very, very slight hum - about 5% of the hum volume that is noted when touching the end. I'm assuming this is just lead quality as each of the three produced marginally different 'sounds'. If I turn the amp volume up at this stage (without touching the end), the hum can be heard there too. Disconnecting the lead between the mixer and amp eliminates hum.
Yes, that'll be due to the lead. Long leads are more susceptible to this than short leads. High quality (shielded) instrument cable is better protected against this.
philby1 wrote:Test 9
As test 8, then:
Plug in the power cable to the Crate (Crate switched off).
Any hum?
Desktop: No.
Laptop: Yes. Volume of hum is not affected by position of main volume slider. Unplugging laptop power supply removes hum.
Test 10
Power up the Crate.
I guess there must be some hum going on by now?
Desktop: Yes, but very slight through headphones; loud through Crate speakers.
Laptop: Yes, but very slight through headphones; VERY loud through Crate speakers (includes electronic buzz). When laptop on batteries, hum is present also but not as loud as when plugged into desktop.
The difference between the laptop and the desktop is probably because the desktop computer is Earthed, but the laptop computer isn't.
The
problem is almost certainly due to the Crate rather than the other equipment, but is probably
not a fault with the Crate.
You are not using the Crate in the way that is has been designed to be used and that's why you're getting this problem.
Typically a guitar amp would be used to amplify the input from a guitar, which in the case of an electric guitar will be a magnetic pick-up (essentially just a coil of wire). The signal that is amplified is the difference between the tip of the jack plug and the sleeve of the jack plug. It does not matter if the Crate has is a bit of AC voltage on the sleeve connection, because there will be a near identical AC voltage on the tip contact. As the amplifier is amplifying the difference between the two contacts, and AC voltage that is present on both contacts is irrelevant (
common mode noise).
The problem is that when you plug in the mixing desk, the sleeve contact on the mixing desk side is properly Earthed. This will pull down any AC ripple on the sleeve contact on the Crate side down to Earth, which means that the AC ripple is no longer common to both tip and sleeve contacts. Because the AC ripple (hum) is now only present on the tip contact, it will be amplified by the Crate, and that's what the problem is.
Possible solutions:
1) Use a different amp. (probably not the solution that you're looking for).
2) Isolate the Crate input from the other equipment using an audio transformer. This is essentially what a "hum killer" does. I've not used one, but the
ART DTI looks like it should do the job. ART have a good reputation for solidly built, good quality accessories at very reasonable prices. You could possibly make one using a Neutrik NTE1 (or similar) for about $15, but it'll cost more than that if you put it in a nice metal box with input/output jack sockets.
What I'd recommend, is that if you have a friendly music shop nearby, either ask if you can take your gear into the shop and try an isolation transformer "hum killer", or ask if you could buy one and return it if it does not fix the problem.
By the way, the reason that the fault does not appear if you just connect the mixer to the amp is because until you have closed the circuit by plugging in the computer, the outputs of the mixer will just be "floating". The mixer output will be getting its "ground reference" from the input, so while there is no input, the output can just drift up and down with the hum from the Crate.
Do keep us informed of your progress. I'm hoping for a happy and inexpensive outcome
