Just when I thought I was done unscrewing the box and disconnecting things.Do the amplifiers produce hum when the input cables are disconnected from them?
WOW - You went above and beyond the call here! Your YouTube channel has one more subscriber.OK; to determine once and for all what the cause is, I found a place selling that exact amp module, with the circuit included - and replicated it.
9.99US $ |Battery Supply Audio Mono Amplifier Kit, Njm386d, Lm386 - Electronics Stocks - AliExpress
Smarter Shopping, Better Living! Aliexpress.comwww.aliexpress.com
The IC in use is an LM386N-3, probably somewhere early 1990s vintage.
ps. To earth your amp, just put an extra wire in to any of the power negative screw terminals and connect that to an appropriate external earth.
Video proof:
(It is HD, but it takes youtube quite a while to process anything above the initial low res release).
It's down to the small external switched-mode PSUs having filter capacitors from the DC input side to the output - so a trace of the AC voltage is directly coupled to the DC side, making it "live" but at quite high impedance.None of my many audio products are Earthed (the video guy called it Grounded) and none produce any hum or buzz. All my audio cables are high quality shielded.
Yes, absolutely - but be extremely careful that there is never any possibility of a misconnection!Regarding external earth, can I connect the wire to any of the third prongs on my Power Strip/Surge protector?
Chinese assemblers use old and new Japanese ones or Chinese copies of them.
Nothing in the video is shielded (he said "not screened"). The buzz increases when the guy touches the volume control but the buzz stops when he touches the 0V wire or when the 0V is Earthed.
None of my many audio products are Earthed (the video guy called it Grounded) and none produce any hum or buzz. All my audio cables are high quality shielded.
There's usually a high value resistor across the capacitor - and there are there to provide a static discharge path, to prevent the output from accumulating a high static voltage.It's down to the small external switched-mode PSUs having filter capacitors from the DC input side to the output - so a trace of the AC voltage is directly coupled to the DC side, making it "live" but at quite high impedance.
eg. See CY1, the 100pF cap, at the top of the example schematic (page 4) for this PSU IC:
No normal audio amplifier supply works like that, so it's not a problem in purpose-made amps - but is exists in a large percentage of "wall wart" type PSUs.
It's a very high impedance coupling though, so you cannot feel it if you touch it, and a proper electrical ground kills it completely - but it's present if nothing grounds it.
Safety is of course of the utmost importance and I want to do this as neatly as I can. If I just power this up with a 3-prong wall adapter, will this just solve the problem? No need to save $ and make my own plug.Yes, absolutely - but be extremely careful that there is never any possibility of a misconnection!
I'd suggest a new plug with a wire permanently connected to the ground pin and sealed up; never a loose wire than is pushed in to a socket outlet, or anything else that could be confused in the future.
Also make sure the wire is heavy enough to not break in the plug, and has a proper strain relief where it leaves the plug body.
There is no guarantee that the ground pin connects to the output side, so it may well still be floating.If I just power this up with a 3-prong wall adapter, will this just solve the problem?
Ty - I threw $14.43 USD at the problem to try and solve it. Should get delivered by late Tuesday and I'll reply to let you know how it works out.There is no guarantee that the ground pin connects to the output side, so it may well still be floating.
It's less likely to pass so much "hum" as a two wire one, as the suppression caps etc. can [hopefully] connect to true earth - but no way of knowing without trying it..
The amp will only draw the current it needs, as you thought.
Thanks.The "thing" in the power cord is probably a filter to prevent the high frequency switch Mode Power Supply from causing interference to nearby radios.
Could I purchase some kind of 3 prong outlet and only wire power negative to ground, then plug the entire thing into my power strip? For my test, I just split the power negative from one amp. Should be completely irrelevant to the result whether I do this with fewer steps by splitting the master power negative one more time, and then sending one end to outlet ground.
If my idea is valid, I'm assuming I could just use this. Pease confirm:
The problem is solved, but I'm still learning here. Too bad I threw out the three prong adapter. Since I cut off the RF choke, I decided to be a good citizen and not be a future RF polluter.There is no guarantee that the ground pin connects to the output side, so it may well still be floating.
The problem is solved, but I'm still learning here. Too bad I threw out the three prong adapter. Since I cut off the RF choke, I decided to be a good citizen and not be a future RF polluter.
The thing is though that when I split and stripped the wires, there were only two sections, and I don't remember seeing anything other than positive and negative. Pictures of the device from my purchase link also show only two wires going into the plug, so does this mean that the ground pin on the plug served no purpose? I can't imagine that cutting off the tip would have defeated the ground.
Also, if the adapter would have had a third grounding wire, could I have eliminated the buzz by joining power negative and power ground at the beginning of the chain, before sending those wires to the amplifiers power negative inputs? If not, could this have been handled differently just using one plug?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?