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Although what really dropped the noise floor in my system to relative blackness, and reduced ground hum to nothing, is this whole house ground filter, installed at my mainshttp://www.ep2000.com/Templates/ep2750.htmland thishttp://www.ep2000.com/Templates/ep2050.html
Quote from: ted_b on 16 Nov 2008, 02:30 pmAlthough what really dropped the noise floor in my system to relative blackness, and reduced ground hum to nothing, is this whole house ground filter, installed at my mainshttp://www.ep2000.com/Templates/ep2750.htmland thishttp://www.ep2000.com/Templates/ep2050.htmlHow much are these things and who would install them?
Don't know about the Tru-Spec coax unit that John mentioned, it could be great quality for all I know. Just posting to mention that I bought the model offered by parts express for $9 and it broke after a few months. I replaced it with the Jensen coax unit, better construction and superior sound quality.Thanks for the ground filters tip Ted, that looks good!
If it is caused by the bad grounding of your cable or sat (most of the time) this will help.http://www.fadfusion.com/selection.php?product_item_number=20161000061Be aware, that cable and sat ground loops can enter your system or any separate system in the house, even if they have NO connection except they are both plugged into your home grid.To see if it is the cable/sat simply listen for the hum, then disconnect the cable/sat feed from the wall (unscrew coaxial). If hum stops, that is the problem.
http://www.jensen-transformers.com/iso_vid.htmlThe Jensen I recommended is coaxial video for cable and FM antenna. It is capacitive, not magnetic isolation so doesn't screw up the digital channels on cable or sat. I found the Jensen to sound noticably better than the transformer variety on FM radio, but it costs more, about $60. Careful on the grounding Brown, you should only have one earth rod for your whole house. If you have a separate unbonded earthing rod (for a quiet stereo/cable ground) then lightning will find resistance between the two paths to earth and vaporize all the conductors between the two earth rods, some are inside the wall. Code allows only one earthing rod, and everything should be connected to it. Unfortunately this isn't the quietest ground possible hence all the gadgets to clean it up... You can have multiple earthing rods for a lightning protection system, but they must be bonded together with wire big enough to carry the lightning current, so they are essentially the same potential anyway and just as noisy when cable TV is grounded to it.