TheAngryFedora
Member
Hello there- I'm wondering if anyone has any advice about this:
I'm working on a musical at the other high school in my town this summer. We're running something like 16 lav's, with the recievers stage right. They work fine, apparently, at least that's what I've been told by the people returning from last summer, we'll be doing extensive testing I hope... But, the main issue (aside from some annoying dead spot/slight interference on a couple of the packs that we'll fix) was that the recievers weren't being run off of the same circuit as the rest of the equipment. Therefore it created a ground loop. I don't know enough about electronics to really say with certainty that I have just used that term properly, but oh well.
Is there any way to fix the insufferable hum that we get from this? Something that we can plug into the wall, and then plug the rack into? I know that I've seen some equipment like that somewhere, I just have no idea where. Any advice is appreciated.
Thanks,
-Ben
I'm working on a musical at the other high school in my town this summer. We're running something like 16 lav's, with the recievers stage right. They work fine, apparently, at least that's what I've been told by the people returning from last summer, we'll be doing extensive testing I hope... But, the main issue (aside from some annoying dead spot/slight interference on a couple of the packs that we'll fix) was that the recievers weren't being run off of the same circuit as the rest of the equipment. Therefore it created a ground loop. I don't know enough about electronics to really say with certainty that I have just used that term properly, but oh well.
Is there any way to fix the insufferable hum that we get from this? Something that we can plug into the wall, and then plug the rack into? I know that I've seen some equipment like that somewhere, I just have no idea where. Any advice is appreciated.
Thanks,
-Ben