Hi,
I have music on my computer, but when plugged into my stereo amplifier, I hear 'computer' noises, which spoil the music.
When nothing is playing, I can here the computer 'thinking', especially when using the mouse.
Can anyone offer a cure for this please?
Camerart.
If you right-click the speaker symbol in the system tray you should get a pop-up with a 'volume mixer' listed. Make sure all other sound sources except the wanted one are muted or set to minimum level in the mixer.
Hi I and A,
I generally use VLC, but have Winamp also.
even with no application running, there are noises.
I found that moving to AUX and adjusting the settings including switching off/down system noises in 'Volume mixer' I am able to get acceptable results although it isn't HIFI quiet, especially when you bear in mind, that it isn't Vinyl on a turntable
Thanks, C.
What computer do you have?
My HP desktop internal sound card has absolutely no noise and it goes to a good amp that drives a pair of high quality speakers.
Sounds like maybe something's faulty with yours.
What computer do you have?
My HP desktop internal sound card has absolutely no noise and it goes to a good amp that drives a pair of high quality speakers.
Sounds like maybe something's faulty with yours.
Are you plugging into the front jack or rear jack? I've never seen a computer where you can use the front jack because they pick up so much noise somehow.
Are you plugging into the front jack or rear jack? I've never seen a computer where you can use the front jack because they pick up so much noise somehow.
Well, if it's happening in your rear jack too then there's not much you can do. Either changing your the soundcard, mobo, speakers, or cable lengths. Or go with an external amp. Just a bad combination of equipment.
Hi,
The mystery unfolds!
I tried filling in the manufacturers tech support questionnaire, which took some time, with all of the details, clicked send and got 'site busy try later' and the form re-set
A parcel arrived and my son said try this: An AV:LINK Ground loop isolator.
I connected the leads through it to the AMP phonos, and the noises have disappeared. Brilliant.
Then I tried removing it and still no noises.
I was going to suggest a transformer ground-loop isolator in the audio path. We hams who connect audio to/from PC sound-cards to our transceivers found out twenty years ago that the chassis of the PC (the gnd side of the RCA jack) is hot with common-mode PC related garbage, including crap from the switching power supply in the PC. The ground-loop isolator effectively breaks the path for the common-mode noise that would otherwise travel along the shield of the audio cable.
I was going to suggest a transformer ground-loop isolator in the audio path. We hams who connect audio to/from PC sound-cards to our transceivers found out twenty years ago that the chassis of the PC (the gnd side of the RCA jack) is hot with common-mode PC related garbage, including crap from the switching power supply in the PC. The ground-loop isolator effectively breaks the path for the common-mode noise that would otherwise travel along the shield of the audio cable.
Hi M,
Previously, I had tried one track with an isolating transformer, but it didn't cure the noises.
The name GLI, includes the word ground, so I assume something has grounded coincidentally while I was playing around. Note, I had also tried a ground wire to the computer then to the amp, with no benefit.
C
Assuming that you have a stereo amp, you will need two isolation transformers. If you connect just one, there is still a DC Ohmic (Galvanic) connection between the chassis of the PC and the chassis of the audio amp. Isolation transformers work by breaking the Galvanic common-mode path, but letting audio pass through the magnetic flux in the transformer.