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The sound system in our gym SUCKS!
We have several problems with the sound system in our gym (the gym is used for thing like assemblies and our annual arts showcase). First of all, whenever the sound system is on, a few of the speakers play the radio. Nothing loud, but still enough to be noticable and annoying. When we were working on the aformentioned arts showcase, we tried to fix the problem. Our school TD thought it was a grounding problem, so we put little grounding plugs on the speakers that were playing radio. But whenever we couldn't hear it on one, it started up on another speaker. We didn't have enough time to fix it before the show, so what we ended up doing is turning off the system when no one was using the microphones so you wouldn't hear the radio during musican pieces. Another problem that we noticed with the same system is caused by the lighting dimmers. When we were setting up for the show, we noticced that whenever the lights were at anything but full and off the sound system would get a terrible hum in it. For some reason the dimmer system was screwing up our sound system. The guy who set it up (guy who runs the radio department at the school) said he was going to fix it, but has made no effort to (probably because he was the one who screwed it up in the first place). Our TD plans to tear down the whole system over the summer and set it back up again. *sigh* |
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hmm you might want to try and isolation transformer, if they make them that big, any decent power conditioner should have some sort of system like that in it. should filter out the EMF noise form your lightrs and dimmers, or alternativlay use your sound on a diffrent circut mabe
We once had cablew wired wrong in my old school and the music from the computer was going into the sound board, out throught the power wires, into the power bar, and into the amp and out the speakers.....explain that one.....
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My Mag Light is my Flashlight, My beating stick, And my fine adjustment tool !!! |
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the radio problem seems like one i had when i was doing sound for a live TV broadcast, the length of the audio cable acted like a big antenna, and allowed a standing wave to form, we clearly heard the local radio station. i never checked the physics to determine this for sure, but changing the length of the cables helped. Also properly groundng them should help.
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are the speakers shielded? keep the dimmers off the same circuits as the sound system!
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Philip LaDue Endicott Audio ADR Audio "The loudspeaker has more of an effect on the sound we hear than anything else in the audio reproduction chain"- Alan Frank |
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It would be helpful if you could provide more information on the equipment in the sound system and how it is hooked up. If you have wireless, how many do you have, what brand/model are they, what frequency(ies) do they run at, etc.
As far as the dimmer/sound system hum, this is best diagnosed by a licensed electrician. Chances are you won't have much choice as to where it is plugged in, and if that is wired incorrectly, you can't do anything about it without an electrician. DO NOT USE A GROUND ISOLATOR TO FIX THE PROBLEM! This is an electrical code violation and it's just asking for someone to get hurt if there is a potential between earth and the sound system's ground.
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Mike Benonis Grad Electrical Engineering '14, Virginia Tech Electrical Engineering '09, The University of Virginia KI4RIX http://www.benonis.net/ |
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Quote:
I am not sure what system we have installed, I will try to go and take a look on monday. Thanks for your help everyone |
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Quote:
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Mike Benonis Grad Electrical Engineering '14, Virginia Tech Electrical Engineering '09, The University of Virginia KI4RIX http://www.benonis.net/ |
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I don't know, it is too quiet to make our any content.
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I would start by disconnecting the input leads into the amplifiers. Then I would turn on the amplifier and see if you can still hear the radio. If you can you could get the amplifiers output checked by a technician who can put in RF blocking. If the radio is not comming through the speakers in this test reconnect the input leads but leave them disconnected from the mixer. If the radio is now comming through try putting RF blockers around the cables at the end near the amp. You should be able to buy some at Radio Shack. Keep repeating this process until you have an idea where the radio interference is entering your signal path and use appropriate RF blocking methods.
Also, to check if it the school's radio station, quite probably, ask them for a schedule of when the station is not transmitting then turn on the sound system at one of these times. If there is no interference then it probaly is the school radio. |
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