DC can come from your neighbors on the same feed as you....I notice my transformer will hum only occasionally at different times of the day...has to be from something my neighbors are running...have tried DC removal devices and none ever worked
How Much DC is OK on a Power Line?
The other night my Classe amplifiers started producing a substantial mechanical hum. Classe told me that it was likely from DC on the power line. The hum was there even when the preamp was switched to standby, and even when I plugged the amps into different sockets.
My questions:
1) how much DC on the powerline does it take to cause problems with audio equipment?
2) How does DC get into the AC signal on the power line?
3) Do the power companies have any spec they need to acheive for maximum DC?
4) Or is it more likely appliances within my house causing the DC.
Thanks, Peter
My questions:
1) how much DC on the powerline does it take to cause problems with audio equipment?
2) How does DC get into the AC signal on the power line?
3) Do the power companies have any spec they need to acheive for maximum DC?
4) Or is it more likely appliances within my house causing the DC.
Thanks, Peter
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Peter, what model Classe amp do you have ? A lot of later production CA-XX0 series amps have DC blocking circuitry, and for earlier production models that did not have it, the DC blocker circuit board was available as a retrofit. A couple hundred millivolts of DC is all it takes to cause transformer hum. Abnormal high voltage and harmonic distortion can also cause hum. DC blockers will not eliminate hum caused by harmonic distortion. DC can be caused by a variety of devices, including but not limited to light dimmers, appliance speed or temperature controls, washing machine motors, refrigerator and air conditioner compressors, etc. The PS Audio Humbuster and Channel Islands XDC-2 AC filter should eliminate most transformer noise caused by DC. There is also the DIY option. I've done DC blockers for a few Audiogon members at a fraction of the cost of the "big boys". As mentioned above, DC can come from a neighbor's house. It can also be generated in your own house. I would investigate in-house sources before looking for a solution. Look for possible sources, shut off all breakers and see if the noise goes away. I don't know of any power company DC spec. |
By the way, I'm using an Environmental Potentials home surge protector / conditioner as discussed inthis thread. As it is on a breaker, I can take it out of the system. |
I struggled with this issue for quite some time a couple years back. IMO Gbart has summed the situation up nicely. 'being an electronics hacker, I constructed a DC offset blocker for AC line, and all was fine. I have noticed for instance that in the case of Bryston, at least the amps I have looked at in fact have this DC block built in. ( I don't own Bryston, it's just that they publish schematics on their web site, and the circuitry is shown ) |
It is my understanding you cannot measure DC on the AC mains just by connecting your digital meter, set on DC voltage, across the mains. Not trying to start a flame but http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/solid-state/2080-dc-filter.html Eva . |
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Most hum on power transformers is caused by DC on the power line. The source could be anywhere. It could be caused by a poorly designed switching power supply in a Television or a light dimmer. You can DIY a DC filter to take the DC off the power line before the power transformer or purchase something like PS Audio's Humbuster 3. http://www.musicdirect.com/p-2845-ps-audio-humbuster-3.aspx |
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I have to take umbrage with the quote above. Unless there is a center-tap on the primary side of the power transformer (and there never is) this DC thing is of no consequence whatsoever as the power transformer will simply see that total voltage across its windings. It may be a distorted waveform, but there won't be any DC. Keep in mind that one thing transformers get used for all the time is to block DC, and values at considerably higher levels than just a few millivolts. However, *something* does happen, the distortion I just mentioned. Fluke Instruments published a very nice white paper about 20 years ago that explores this phenomena. It turns out that the primary (no pun intended...) cause of mechanical noise in power transformers is the 5th harmonic (300Hz in the US). The paper also gives a formula to allow one to calculate the distortion on the AC line, if you know the current drawn and the source impedance of the line transformer (perhaps the one on the power pole outside your house) winding. The 5th harmonic can cause power transformers to become mechanically noisy, power rectifiers to radiate mechanical and electrical noise, and creates forces in hysteresis motors that can make them run backwards. |
Not sure what a center-tap on the primary would have to do with DC voltage on the mains. http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/solid-state/2080-dc-filter.html >>>>>>> http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/solid-state/2080-dc-filter-6.html #57 Eva gives actual hands on test data.... . Jim |
Hmm. So, with the AC line having one side at ground, there's supposed to be a DC level? The idea that a hair dryer can shift the ground potential to a DC level seem far fetched- it would require that the neutral side of the AC line be not connected to ground. Distortion, OTOH, is the sort of thing that both Nelson and Eva were describing. |
What does one AC line conductor, (neutral conductor), of the electrical service intentionally connected to earth have to do with it. The main reasons for connecting the service neutral conductor to earth is for lightning protection and to establish one common ground plane. Distortion, OTOH, is the sort of thing that both Nelson and Eva were describing.How does the DC blocker filter block out the distortion? Eva has many follow-up posts throughout the running of the thread. Like I said in my earlier post she ran hands on experiments and tests. If I get a chance tomorrow I will visit the archives on AA. I remember John Curl posting about DC voltage on the mains. . Jim |
Well Jim, I'm certainly open to finding out I've been wrong about things. Its how we learn :) As far as the earth connection, what I am talking about here is that the hot side of the line is measured with respect to the neutral (ground). So if there is a DC component present, the AC voltage will be shifted with respect to the neutral. *That*, since the neutral is tied to the earth connection, will take some current and will likely heat the wiring up in the process. Now if you have as an example Eva's hair dryer, running on half power so it its only conducting when the diode conducts, I can see that that might be interpreted as DC. But, it can also be interpreted as harmonic distortion. I'm not arguing, IOW, that the phenomena does not exist, just the explanation. One could as easily argue that a 2nd harmonic in the output of an amplifier is a DC phenomena as well. I would like to see Eva's scope readings, but the images don't load off of DIYaudio. |
My balanced power conditioner (Isoclean) was humming/buzzing loudly, sometimes for hours, sometimes for days, with no predictable pattern, and this was on a dedicated line. I put the Channel Islands XDC-2 between the wall outlet and the Isoclean unit, and the problem immediately and permanently disappeared. |