A technician here in town just called me to ask about a JCM 900 he has on his bench.
After he fixed whatever problem the musician had complained about, he was looking at the circuit and noticed that the circuit ground was above mains earth by 22 ohms, after looking at the schem he noted it wasn't just a resistor, it's actually 2 diodes, a resistor and a capacitor.
Here is the relevant sector http://i.imgur.com/aPHFv.png
So just for kicks, he shorted the circuit ground to chassis, bypassing that circuitry, and the hum was immense. Take out the shunt and it was quiet....
Can any of you please explain the theory behind this?
That schem was extracted from a PDF mentioned in another discussion here, by Enzo, at this address: http://music-electronics-forum.com/t12351/
I understand why giving the heaters a reference reduces hum, but why would elevating the circuit ground relative to mains earth / chassis reduce hum?
Thanks very much in advance.
After he fixed whatever problem the musician had complained about, he was looking at the circuit and noticed that the circuit ground was above mains earth by 22 ohms, after looking at the schem he noted it wasn't just a resistor, it's actually 2 diodes, a resistor and a capacitor.
Here is the relevant sector http://i.imgur.com/aPHFv.png
So just for kicks, he shorted the circuit ground to chassis, bypassing that circuitry, and the hum was immense. Take out the shunt and it was quiet....
Can any of you please explain the theory behind this?
That schem was extracted from a PDF mentioned in another discussion here, by Enzo, at this address: http://music-electronics-forum.com/t12351/
I understand why giving the heaters a reference reduces hum, but why would elevating the circuit ground relative to mains earth / chassis reduce hum?
Thanks very much in advance.
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