Title: Grounding and Cabling for the Small Studio
1Grounding and Cabling for the Small Studio
2Disclaimers
- NEVER defeat the AC ground!! (round prong)
- AC current can KILL if in doubt, stop and get
more info - I am not an electrician so dont count on me to
keep you safe
3Objectives
- How can we get rid of that annoying hum?!?
- How can we reduce the noise floor through proper
cabling? - How can we keep our equipment and ourselves safe
while doing it? - Can we do this systematically, not haphazardly?
4Basic Definitions
- Voltage (Potential) difference in charge
between two points (V Volts) - Current the flow of electricity (positive to
negative) (I Amperes) - Resistance a components opposition to current
flow (R Ohms)
V I R
5Part I
6Grounding (Earthing)
- Ground (1) Literally the Earth, effectively a
point with 0 potential and infinite
charge-holding capacity - Ground (2) The lowest potential point in a
circuit, serving as a current return path
Signal Ground
Chassis Ground
Earth Ground
7Two-Prong Outlets
Hot Black, Red or Blue Neutral - White
8Three-Prong Outlets
Hot Black, Red or Blue Neutral White Ground
Green
9Already a Problem
- Many, many home AC circuits are wired improperly
- This can cause noise and shock hazards
- Use a multimeter or 5 Radioshack tester to
verify every AC outlet
10Short Circuit with Proper Grounding
11Short with Broken Ground
Mics and Electric Guitars with broken grounds are
especially dangerous
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13Ground Noise
- All signals are referenced to ground
- Noise (voltage changes) on the ground line create
noise in the signal - Since AC oscillates at 60Hz, this often results
in a 60Hz hum
14Ground Loops
- One point, two paths to ground
- Current requires a closed loop to flow
- Two paths to ground makes a closed loop
- Ground noise is then possible
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16Chassis-to-Chassis
- Touching chassis can form an electrical
connection - Rackmount rails can also connect chassis
- This can be good or bad, depending on the
situation
17Noise Source Two Circuits
Easiest solution Put both devices on one AC
circuit
18Noise Source Dirty Ground
- Remember V I R Low resistance means big
current - Solve with a power conditioner (Furman, etc.) or
- isolation transformer
- Or put everything on one AC outlet, but watch
the - power draw
19Induced Current
20Induced Ground Current
21Solution
22Induced Current, Contd
- Usually, 6 separation is enough to eliminate
induced current - Wall-wart transformers have unpredictable fields
keep them as isolated as possible - Induced currents cannot be totally eliminated
23Other Sources of Ground Noise
- Internal Power Supply (Induction and Capacitance)
- Upgrade or mod the equipment
- use balanced cables
24Fixing Ground Loops
- Put everything on one AC circuit
- Use a current meter like Kill-a-Watt or Power
Angel to measure current draw - Separate Signal cables from AC cables (and esp.
Wall-wart transformers) - Try to keep at least 6 between
- Cross at 90 if necessary
- Use Balanced Cables wherever possible
25Part II
26Balanced Cabling CMR
27Balanced Advantages
- High rejection of ground noise
- Also rejects external EMF
- CMR not perfect still wise to minimize ground
noise - Proper operation depends on proper ground wiring
28AC vs. Signal Ground
- AC Ground is designed for safety
- Signal Ground is an internal reference for
circuit paths - Signal Ground is usually tied to Chassis Ground
at one point - Balanced cables should ALWAYS use chassis ground
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30WRONG Signal Ground
31RIGHT Chassis Ground
32Problems
- Much old or cheap equipment uses signal ground
- Unfortunately, this can cause noise even with
balanced connections - The only choices are upgrading or modding
33Finding Improper Grounding
- Visual Inspection
- Use a multimeter to test for voltage between
shield and chassis - Should be very low (ideally 0V)
- But, could tie to both chassis and signal ground
34Fixing Improper Balanced I/O
- Best Cut the trace to signal ground and bond to
chassis ground - Easier Disconnect the cable shield at the end
tied to signal ground - Breaks any ground loops
- But shield is now an RF antenna
- Can alleviate by bonding shield to chassis
through a 0.01µF capacitor - But then why not just mod the equipment?!?
35Worst Case
- Both input and output tied to signal ground
- No standard solution, but most people connect one
end of the shield - Which end is unimportant, but you must make the
same choice each time - Might be a very slight benefit to lifting at the
input side
36One More Problem
- Units with a wall-wart transformer are not
connected to AC ground - These units can have balanced I/O
- Solve this by bonding the ungrounded chassis to a
known grounded chassis
37Sidebar Cable Quality
- Cable quality varies substantially
- Foil shields best protection but easily damaged
- Use in fixed installations
- Braided shields look for maximum coverage
38Some Brands
- Pro Quality Canare, Mogami
- Also good Belden, Gepco, Rapco, Whirlwind
- AVOID HOSA
- Monster Good but way overpriced
- Or make your own pro quality at a budget price
- Connectors Neutrik, Switchcraft
39Unbalanced Cabling
- Two conductors Hot and Neutral
- No CMR no magnetic field rejection
- Often found on semi-pro or consumer gear
- ¼ TS (mono) RCA
- Always keep unbalanced runs as short as possible
40Shield goes to Signal Ground!
- Shield acts as current return path
- Necessary to form a complete circuit
- Not a true shield but does offer some protection
41Best Solution Convert to Balanced
42Next Best Solution Transformers
www.whirlwindusa.com
Audio Isolation Transformers DI Boxes Many
Preamps etc.
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44Last Resort Cut the Shield
- N.B. Cutting the shield on a single-wire cable
will ruin the cable!! - We are going to cut the shield on a two-wire
(balanced) cable - This modified cable can then be used to connect
unbalanced lt-gt balanced
45Most Common Unbalanced ? Balanced
- Simply disconnect the shield at one end
- TRS sleeve XLR pin 1
46Balanced ? Unbalanced
47Balanced ? Unbalanced
48Balanced ? Unbalanced
49Hierarchy of Preference
- Balanced --gt Balanced
- Unbalanced --gt Balanced
- Balanced --gt Unbalanced
- Unbalanced --gt Unbalanced
- Chassis-shielded at both ends
- Chassis-shielded at one end, other end lifted
- Signal-shielded at one end, other end lifted
50More Info
- If the choice of which end to cut is arbitrary,
make the same choice each time - Many possible scenarios
- See the two Rane references for excellent charts
- Also see Jensen whitepapers for a more technical
discussion
51Summary of Best Practices
- Connect all devices to one AC circuit
- Use balanced I/O whenever possible
- Transformer-Isolate unbalanced lines when
possible - Cut shielding at one end if necessary
- Keep signal lines away from AC (esp. wall-warts)
- Cross signal and AC lines at 90 if necessary
52Noise Isolation Procedure
- Disconnect everything
- Connect monitors to main I/O verify good
grounding and no noise - Connect balanced gear one by one verify no noise
- Connect unbalanced gear one by one modify until
noise is acceptable
53Sidebar Advanced Studio Grounding
- Pros
- Can reduce noise floor to commercial-studio
levels - Cons
- Complex
- Expensive
- Often a workaround for improper cabling or
equipment design
54Primary Techniques
- Isolated Ground drive a dedicated ground bar,
completely separate from the main AC grid - Star Grounding Use heavy copper wiring to ground
every device to one central point
55Balanced Power
Common-Mode Rejection Cancels Ground Noise (just
like balanced audio!)
56Balanced Power Pros and Cons
- Pros
- Eliminates noise from reactive current (i.e., bad
internal design) - Isolates from building power
- Cons
- Wont solve all ground loop problems
- Pricey!! (1000 and up)
57Digital Audio Cables
- Digital signals themselves should be immune to
ground noise - But, the cabling can create ground loops that
affect other signals - AES/EBU Isolation transformers prevent loops
- Optical S/PDIF (TOSLink) No electrical
connection so no loops - Coaxial S/PDIF Supposedly isolated but some
cheap equipment isnt - Can build an isolator usually easier solutions
58Interfacing with the Computer
- Tricky!!!
- High power load might require a separate AC
circuit - Many different I/O paths
59Common I/O schemes
- Soundblaster-type cards
- Almost always unbalanced
- Treat like any other unbalanced I/O
- Firewire Interfaces (MOTU 828, etc.)
- Firewire grounds to the computer
- Must then consider the computer part of the
grounding topology
60Computer I/O Contd
- Cable Modem
- Ethernet interfaces usually wont link grounds
- USB interfaces can link computer to cable ground
- Use a Cable Isolator to break the coax ground
- Many other I/Os possible
- Youll need to experiment
61Final Sidebar Impedance
- Too complex to cover here
- Basically, impedance is like a frequency-dependent
resistance - Really good CMR requires I/O circuits with good
impedance design - If you want really really low noise, read up on
impedance
62Grounding References
- http//www.epanorama.net/documents/groundloop/
- http//www.equitech.com/articles/articles.html
- http//www.rane.com/note151.html
- http//www.dself.dsl.pipex.com/ampins/groundloops/
grndloop.htm
63Cabling References
- http//www.jensen-transformers.com/apps_wp.html
- http//www.rane.com/note110.html
64http//www.davidetlinger.com