I suddenly have a weird buzz issue; can someone help me solve the problem?


Hi all,

 

To provide some background, My system is as follows:

 

A “headless” Mac Mini as Roon core (my hands are tied with respect to using the MacMini, as I use Theoretica Physics BACCH4Mac cross-channel cancellation software/filtering to achieve "true" 3D sound, and this requires the player/streamer be a Mac device), outputting USB to a BelCanto RefLink USB-to-SPDIF converter, outputting SPDIF to a Mojo Audio Mystique v3+ DAC, which feeds a custom-built Dennis Had LP-2030 preamp, which outputs to a custom-built Dennis Had Inspire KT88 FireBottle SEP amplifier (max output, depending on tubes, is 12 WPC). Speakers are Coherent Audio GR-15 Neo Signatures.

 

All components are plugged into a Puritan PSM156 conditioner. I also have a GoldenEar Forcefield powered sub (amp is like 1200 watts) that is plugged directly into a dedicated outlet.

 

About a week ago, I became intrigued with the idea of powering my system completely off the grid, as even with the Puritan, I still noticed my system sounded markedly better on certain days and at certain times of day than others.  Also, there was some hum/buzz from the system, which I assumed was still AC-related, as it seemed worse at certain times of day than others.

 

I followed the guide from Ric Schultz here:

http://tweakaudio.com/EVS-2/Inverter_Power.html

 

All necessary components arrived, and I got them all hooked up.  Everything except the powered sub is plugged into the Puritan, which is now being fed by the Giandel inverter.

 

Interestingly, when I powered everything up, the previous hum noise is gone (yay!), and the sound is glorious when music is playing, but I now have a buzzing sound coming from my speakers (when nothing playing) that increases as I turn up the volume on my preamp. I tried installing cheater plugs on all components, lifting everything from ground, as I thought it could have something to do with the sub being plugged into the wall and the other components all going though the Puritan and the Giandel inverter, but this made no difference at all.

 

I would be very grateful for any advice/suggestions on what I can try.

 

One thing I noted is that the inverter is putting out 122 volts. I am wondering if the preamp is “unhappy” with this slightly high voltage and would prefer something closer to 115-118 volts, as read on another forum that this may be an issue and that one can test this by using a Variac, but I don’t know enough about electrical things to know whether it is a valid point or not, and I don’t know if I can plug a Variac into the inverter or not to test this possibility.

 

Thanks so much,

Chris

cporada

Hi Erik,

Thanks; I had also thought it might be the USB, so I checked on the BelCanto - it does, in fact, include galvanic isolation.

What do you mean by "pull the power out of your "clean" power section"?

Thanks,

Chris

OP:

So if you imagine a power conditioner, it has a dirty side (the source) and a clean side, which is after the conditioner has cleaned up the noise. Putting a polluting power supply on the "clean" side can contaminate it. So, assuming you have an ideal battery solution putting a PC power supply on it may in fact make it dirty again.

If you know you have galvanic isolation there’s no reason to keep the Mac on the clean side of your power supply. Go ahead and put it on your wall outlet. The galvanic isolation will ensure there’s no weird lifted interactions between your battery power and your audio circuit and the wall outlet.

This way any possible noise introduced by the Mac can't inject itself into the AC again.

Best,

 

Erik

In my experience, preamp tubes is most-likely culprit no matter who designed components. They're also a lot cheaper to swap-check than power tubes. Then you test power tubes. I must assume that you have an extra set just in case and if you don't -- plan to have it.

 

BTW, kudos to Bel Canto for having that feature, sadly not every USB input for audio has this and they 100% should.

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