Ferrite is commonly used (ceramic form of oxides of iron). You can get in various forms, including products designed to clamp around eires for this purpose. There are also other electromagnetic blocking materials that come in useful forms such as cloth, tape, etc.
Post removed |
@erik_squires . Like to improve my Oppo 205 without any upgrades. Just read about Berkeley as I'm considering dac upgrade ( or Spectral spinner). Still love disc movies on my Sony 4k. Mu metal for transformer 'may' be interesting. I'm just getting back to listening. Been busy w project. Relaxation coming up-again :) Time to ponder hi-fi improvements. Your comments always interesting/informative/ mannerly :) |
Just be aware that proper EMI/RFI interference shielding requires significant engineering knowledge and it is best done by professionals and requires very expensive specialist equipment. I see little point in trying ad-hoc solutions, it is very difficult to achieve a good shield at home. Do you really have a EMI/RFI radiation issue and how does it manifest itself? |
@greg_f . In a review of Alpha Reference mention of "material" added to absord radiated digital noise, nothing complicated. |
+1 on shungite, @mahgister is right |
This is the comment from Mr. Harleys' review of the Dac 3. I'd like to know the material. "When I removed the Alpha 3’s top panel, I noticed a square of material above the digital-to-analog conversion section, just as in the Reference. This ultra-expensive material absorbs and diffuses RF energy. Noise radiated by circuits is absorbed rather than being reflected from the top panel back into the circuit board."
|
@ptss I just don't believe you can slap a little bit of some 'magic' material to tackle emissions. EMC compliance (includes RFI/EMI emissions) is big business in Europe and companies spend millions to ensure their products meet the requirements at all stages of product development. At the design stage you account for emissions and you control them using various design techniques. Then there are several stages of EMC testing before a product is released to production. If you believe you have emissions issues you need to measure it and then decide what to do about it. I am assuming that you mean emissions when you say stray digital noise. What do you think is the root of it, where is it coming from?
|
Why did you say that ? How dare you ?😉
Please explain a bit why if i am right ? If not this one line did not say much... 😁 Thanks ... |
Thanks it is good to know for anyone...
Now try some quartz or herkimer diamond near the shungite or in his place at some point to reach an even better balance ...Experiment and listen to aim at the right balance and spots... Shungite tend to compress sound ... ( it shield from EMI too ) Quartz tend to decompress it ... balance is key ...
|
@ptss That plate is Permalloy. It has magnetic properties similar to Mu metal but is much less ductile. Mu metal can be formed easily into various shapes. I have digital equipment all around analog gear and I don't have to shield anything. I do not have any interference or mystery noise. I spend my money on records and not trying to fix problems I do not have. The solution is not to buy equipment that is inadequately shielded. |
@mijostyn Totally agree. if a product is emitting RF or whatever then it is not fit for purpose and shouldn't be in the market. |