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Is the DAC point to point or is it PCB boards?
...... your new paradisea is not really of good quality......... It is probably not propery shielded and/or grounded........It is also possible that is "generating and capturing it's own noise."................ In this case it can be manufacturing and/or design flaw.
Quote from: LightFire on 3 Dec 2006, 05:42 am...... your new paradisea is not really of good quality......... It is probably not properly shielded and/or grounded........It is also possible that is "generating and capturing it's own noise."................ In this case it can be manufacturing and/or design flaw.Thats one helluva stretch. especially if you've never heard one, had one in your hands or even studied the schematic and architecture to see if there could be flaw.
...... your new paradisea is not really of good quality......... It is probably not properly shielded and/or grounded........It is also possible that is "generating and capturing it's own noise."................ In this case it can be manufacturing and/or design flaw.
Your new thingis the cause of your new probem. It looks like your new paradisea is not really of good quality. It is probably not propery shielded and/or grounded. It is also possible that is "generating and capturing it's own noise." In this case it can be manufacturing and/or design flaw. Return it to the seller, or make sure the manufature reapairs it for you.
Josh Said:Strange, I would have thought the cheater plug or the ISOmax would have done it. That would have been if it was ground loop. You've eliminated ground loops. The hum is coupling to the signal.
Josh Said:It could be a DC offset problem. I have coupling caps on the output right? Sorry Josh.
Josh Said:You have coupling caps on the output right?
Josh Said:Maybe the unit isn't working properly, but if you have a multimeter can you measure the DC voltage from the center to the outer part of the RCA connectors for each the L&R? The unit should be turned on, but no signal playing.
Josh Said:Another thing to try is take a pencil and press the eraser down on the tube when the music is playing or stopped.
Josh Said:Is the DAC point to point or is it PCB boards?
Tvad4 Said:Bad tubes cause hum. Swap in a different tube. Sometimes the simplest solutions are overlooked.
Tvad4 Said:Also, be certain your Paradisea DAC is the source of the hum. Have you taken it out of your system completely and used a different source?
LightFire Said:Your new thingis the cause of your new probem. It looks like your new paradisea is not really of good quality. It is probably not propery shielded and/or grounded. It is also possible that is "generating and capturing it's own noise." In this case it can be manufacturing and/or design flaw. Return it to the seller, or make sure the manufature reapairs it for you.
LightFire Said:If I had "one in my hands" it would not be the same one he has in his hands. So manufacturing flaws should still count. It doesn't matter how "good" the "paradiseas" are. What counts is that he received one that is not working well.
LightFire Said:The guy has a system that works fine. Introduces a new item and a new problem arrives. Isn't that obvious that the new item is causing the problem?!
He stands behind his equipment. By the way Jeff, did you check the jumpers inside the unit for proper voltage setting. Again, I don't know if the unit would even operate at all if the jumpers were improperly set, but curiousity forces me to ask you this again...
Jeff said:I received a Paradisea yesterday.It generates a hum in my system that can be heard through my speakers.The hum increases in volume as I increase the gain on the preamp.The hum is the most noticeable from the midrange driver on both mains.Though I can’t hear the hum over the music I know it’s there and I'd like to find a resolution.