I managed to get a GFA 555-II. This is a rally beefy amp. Amazing headroom.
BUT I have a slight hum when there is no music signal. Is this one of this ground probs?
What can I do?
Thanks for help.
I managed to get a GFA 555-II. This is a rally beefy amp. Amazing headroom.
BUT I have a slight hum when there is no music signal. Is this one of this ground probs?
What can I do?
Thanks for help.
Do you get hum with nothing at all, (no cables or anything), connected to the inputs? Have you tried changing the location to see if it's interacting with something else?
John
Nope! With disconnected input cables no hum.Originally Posted by johnaec
BUT When I connect my preamp to my harman amp I do not have any hum.
For clearifiction I'm talking about a slight slight hum.
What about with just cables and no pre-amp? Bad cables? Does changing the polarity, (power plug), of one unit or the other make a difference?
John
Thanks for help John.
It's 2AM here and I'll check this tmorrow. I'll come back to you with this.
Aw, c'mon Guido - it Saturday!Originally Posted by Guido
John
From my previous work as an ADCOM warranty guy here in Winnipeg, I remember some flameproof ground float resistors opening on a few occasions. If you feel handy and have a multimeter. I would check R104 and R154 (one in each channel) They are 100 ohms-1/4 watt and don't show any signs of heat when they open. They also cause a DC offset which your woofers will not like !! They are located on the small input board at the rear.
Make sure those fat main filters are at zero volts as well. :shock: Use a 22 or 33 ohm-10 watt resistor to discharge them after the amp is shut off. Although they already have a 3.9k across them according to my schematic, so your fingers should be safe. Always have the amp unplugged and your speakers disconnected as well when doing work like this. I know that may sound obvious, but it is not obvious to all. Good luck, let me know if you need more help
LE15-Thumper
"Give me JBL, or give me death"
Interesting, seems to be some kind of ground loop. The adcom amp continues playing music for some 20 seconds after switching of. When I pull the main plug the hum stops even though the music still plays.
LE 15 thumper. With your help I'm sure I can fix it. A schematic will help I PM'd you.
Guido has discovered cold fusion again?Originally Posted by Guido
[It's the residual charge in the main power supply capacitors, actually....]
Unfortunately it's only the old capacitor principleOriginally Posted by Zilch
But the hum stops so it's an ground issue as LE15 thumper supposed.
I'm grabbing at straws here by assuming you are using this in Germany (230v-50 hz.) If you know that you are working from the same power source and a common (neutral) and ground for all equipment then it's time to get curious about the Adcom's transformer primary. If this 555II was originally 120v then cross check any conversion work with an Adcom schematic.
Originally Posted by P.Warner
That's a good idea too !!
LE15-Thumper
"Give me JBL, or give me death"
I think it is an original 230V model but will check this. Waiting for the schematicOriginally Posted by P.Warner
Since you're going through all of it, tell us just what are these, and how were they interconnected?Originally Posted by Guido
Oh, and do you still get the GL hum from the preamp Adcom 555-II combo when there is nothing plugged into the preamp?
bo
"Indeed, not!!"
Bo you where right!Originally Posted by boputnam
It was the russound A-Bus Module connected to my Rotel RC-972 that caused the hum. With disconnected A-Bus Module everything is fine.
But now I have another Problem. What to do with the A-Bus? Anyone here with experience in this Field?
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