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How do you ground your amp?
So you ground it to a wall socket? To the screw on the back?
phusis,Casey gave good advice. Best results are likely with the AID-9. Until you are able to obtain one, there are a couple of other things you can try.First, it would *probably* be best if you can ground the amp chasis (via the screw on back) directly to the ground pin (NOT NEUTRAL!!! ) of the same wall outlet that you are plugging the amp into. A 30 foot run of smaller gauge wire to the kitchen oulet is prone to developing a noise voltage across it as well - not to mention that it probably isn't convenient. Second, try running a ground wire from te pc chassis to the ground screw on the NuForce amp as well. This is because the ground of the sound card (which connects to the ground shield of the RCA cable coming out and going to the amp) may not be very good (higher impedance at RF frequencies than you would tend to think). The BEST ground you can get on the pc at RF frequencies is the chassis/outer box cover.The "hiss" you hear may actually be modulated RF coming from inside the computer. "Draining" it away to earth ground may do wonders. Adding the AID-9 afterwards will most likely give the very best results.Good luck, -BobPS. HF noise/RF can be a real pain to deal with.
But before going the possible AID-9 route I wanted to try out what was at hand, so to speak, so I followed your advice, Bob, cutting out a piece of solid core wire(the same wire used from the kitchen), tightened it to a screw on the PC chassis and the back screw on the NuForce amp, and... IT WORKED!!
As of now(with groundwire from kitchen to amp, and then to PC chassis), I've got no problems with hissing sound or hum at all, but is that necessarily any indication of whether it's the best way to ground my setup?