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Installation – Australian Monitor XA1400 User Manual

Page 8

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Hum Problems

Most equipment is designed for minimum hum when used under ideal
conditions. When connected to other equipment, and to a safety earth in an
electrically noisy environment, problems may occur.

The three ”E”s of hum and hum related noise which can plague your audio
system are:
a) Electrostatic radiation,
b) Electromagnetic radiation, and
c) Earth loops

Electrostatic radiation capacitively couples to system elements, causing an
interference voltage that mainly affects higher impedance paths, such as
amplifier inputs. The source is generally a nearby high voltage, such as a mains
lead or a speaker lead. The problem can usually be reduced by moving the
offending lead away, or by providing additional electrostatic shielding (i.e. an
earthed conductor which forms a barrier to the field).

Electromagnetic radiation induces interference currents into system elements
that mainly effect lower impedance paths. Radio transmitters or stray magnetic
fields from mains transformers are often the cause of this problem. It is
generally more difficult to eliminate this kind of interference, but again, moving
the source away or providing a magnetic shield (i.e. a steel shield) should help.

Earth loops can arise from the interfacing of the various pieces of equipment
and their connections to various safety earths.

This is by far the most common cause of hum, and it occurs when source
equipment and the amplifier are plugged into different points along the safety
earth where the safety earth wiring has a current flowing through it. The current
flowing through the wire produces a voltage drop due to the wire’s resistance.
This voltage difference between the amp earth and source equipment earth
appears to the amplifier’s input as a signal and is amplified as hum.
There are three things you can do to avoid earth loop problems:

Ensure the mains power for the audio system is “quiet” i.e. without equipment
on it such as air-conditioning, refrigeration or lighting which may generate noise
in the earth circuit.

Ensure all equipment within the system shares a common ground/ safety
earth point. This will reduce the possibility of circulating earth currents, as
the equipment will be referenced to the same ground potential.

Ensure that balanced signal leads connecting to the amplifier are connected
to earth at one end only.

Signal Ground-Lift Switch

When proper system hook-up has been made, you may still have some hum
or hum related noise. This may be due to any of the previously mentioned
gremlins.

Your XA Series amplifier has a “Signal Ground Lift” switch which disconnects
the input ground wiring from the amplifier. A substantial drop in hum and/or
hum related noise can result from the judicious use of this switch.

NOTE: If the input ground lift switch is used, you must ensure
adequate shielding of the input wiring. If the signal source equipment
does not provide adequate shielding (i.e. a definitive connection to
ground), you must disconnect the shield from the input connector’s
ground pin

(Pin-1) and re-connect it to the ”drain” contact on the input connector.
This will ensure the shield on your input wiring actually goes
to the amplifier chassis and subsequently to earth.

IMPORTANT: Do not connect pin-1 directly to the drain connection.
You will defeat the amplifiers internal grounding scheme and possibly
cause instability to the amplifier.

Always ensure that your amplifier is off and the attenuators are down
when you engage this switch. This switch should only be used when the
amplifier is operated from a balanced signal source.

NOTE: Be wary of quasi-balanced outputs, these are often no more
than floating unbalanced outputs.

Speaker Connector Wiring Diagram

PAGE 8

XA1000 & XA1400 INSTALLATION AND OPERATION MANUAL

INSTALLATION

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