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Connecting computer to amp causes great interference

Reply from: grummanf6f@hotmail . com
Date: 02 Sep, 09:49
Hello all,

I wanted to copy old vinyls to CD, so I got me an RCA-to-minijack
cable, and connected it to the TAPE2 rec out of my Yamaha RX-530 tuner
amplifier.

After fiddling with the computer line in adjustments, I found a
suitable level for recording, and the transfer works nice. But if the
minijack is connected to the computer, I have much noise in the
regular outputs, loudspeakers and headphone. If I disconnect the jack,
it goes away.

Is there something I am doing wrong here, or is it that the cable
itself is faulty?

Thank you in advance!


Reply from: Ron Hardin
Date: 02 Sep, 12:31
grummanf6f@hotmail . com wrote:
>
> Hello all,
>
> I wanted to copy old vinyls to CD, so I got me an RCA-to-minijack
> cable, and connected it to the TAPE2 rec out of my Yamaha RX-530 tuner
> amplifier.
>
> After fiddling with the computer line in adjustments, I found a
> suitable level for recording, and the transfer works nice. But if the
> minijack is connected to the computer, I have much noise in the
> regular outputs, loudspeakers and headphone. If I disconnect the jack,
> it goes away.
>
> Is there something I am doing wrong here, or is it that the cable
> itself is faulty?
>
> Thank you in advance!

Almost certainly a ground loop ; put an isolation transformer in the
audio line (Radio Shack 270-054 works fine).
--
rhhardin@mindspring . com

On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk.

Reply from: Mark D. Zacharias
Date: 03 Sep, 13:12

<grummanf6f@hotmail . com > wrote in message
news:1188719375.565070.298990@57g2000hsv.googlegroups . com ...
> Hello all,
>
> I wanted to copy old vinyls to CD, so I got me an RCA-to-minijack
> cable, and connected it to the TAPE2 rec out of my Yamaha RX-530 tuner
> amplifier.
>
> After fiddling with the computer line in adjustments, I found a
> suitable level for recording, and the transfer works nice. But if the
> minijack is connected to the computer, I have much noise in the
> regular outputs, loudspeakers and headphone. If I disconnect the jack,
> it goes away.
>
> Is there something I am doing wrong here, or is it that the cable
> itself is faulty?
>
> Thank you in advance!
>

You have not said what type of noise, but a ground loop would be the most
likely to cause a problem in this context.

Try disconnecting any connection to a cable TV system. If that's not it, you
could try audio isolation transformers as someone else suggested, though
personally I'd just lift the ground for the computer. People think this is
dangerous, but it's really not. The ground just goes to the computer case,
that's all. You'd have to have something inside the power supply short to
the case before lifting the ground would ever be a problem.

Mark Z.



Reply from: DaveW
Date: 04 Sep, 01:36
You have an electrical fault in your system. What you are doing should work
otherwise.

--
---------------------
DaveW

---------------------
<grummanf6f@hotmail . com > wrote in message
news:1188719375.565070.298990@57g2000hsv.googlegroups . com ...
> Hello all,
>
> I wanted to copy old vinyls to CD, so I got me an RCA-to-minijack
> cable, and connected it to the TAPE2 rec out of my Yamaha RX-530 tuner
> amplifier.
>
> After fiddling with the computer line in adjustments, I found a
> suitable level for recording, and the transfer works nice. But if the
> minijack is connected to the computer, I have much noise in the
> regular outputs, loudspeakers and headphone. If I disconnect the jack,
> it goes away.
>
> Is there something I am doing wrong here, or is it that the cable
> itself is faulty?
>
> Thank you in advance!
>



Reply from: grummanf6f@hotmail . com
Date: 06 Sep, 18:37
On 4 syys, 02:36, "DaveW" <noth...@bot.org> wrote:
> You have an electrical fault in your system. What you are doing should work
> otherwise.
>
> --
> ---------------------
> DaveW

Okay, I'll try to fix that somehow. How does one ground a laptop
computer? It's an Acer TravelMate 8100.

Thanks for all your hints & tips, folks! Appreciate 'em very much.






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