My question concerns trying to use a DC power supply on the bugger. Being screwed into my pedalboard, it's a pain to unscrew and remove it every time the battery goes dead. I've drilled a hole in the side, and tried several different wall-wart power supplies on it. I get the same result no matter what DC supply I use, or if the supply's plugged into another circuit or not: a horrendously noticeable HUM that you can even hear when I play, and (of course, because of the compression) is extremely loud when I'm not playing, especially if using any distortion (which I don't use a lot of).
It's driving me nuts, because I want to use it, but I don't wish to run off batteries, since a dead one can nail you in the middle of a song onstage. I've tried using caps across the DC input, to reduce noise on the DC supply, from .1uF to 22uF. No change at all was noted in the hum (which I expect is 60Hz). Why this little bugger hums so loudly on a 9VDC supply, yet not on a battery, mystifies me. I know these wall-wart supplies aren't the best on the planet, but I checked them out on an oscilloscope to see how much AC noise is on them, and it varied greatly from one to the other. However, the amount of hum didn't change between supplies; it was always loud.
One other data point: when the guitar input jack was unplugged, there was no hum, even though the LED remained on (I thought maybe there was a switch on the input jack, but the LED shouldn't be on if this was so). But whether the input was connected to a guitar, another pedal, wireless receiver, or even a cable plugged into nothing, made no difference; it hummed as long as anything was plugged into the input jack.
Is it some sort of ground loop, since this unit was not originally designed to run off a DC supply instead of a battery? I don't know - I don't wish to destroy it, so I haven't taken it completely apart. I've done enough to it by drilling a hole in the side, and replacing the original black insulating foam (which rotted away) with orange insulating foam (which will not rot)...
So, does anyone have any ideas?
It's driving me nuts, because I want to use it, but I don't wish to run off batteries, since a dead one can nail you in the middle of a song onstage. I've tried using caps across the DC input, to reduce noise on the DC supply, from .1uF to 22uF. No change at all was noted in the hum (which I expect is 60Hz). Why this little bugger hums so loudly on a 9VDC supply, yet not on a battery, mystifies me. I know these wall-wart supplies aren't the best on the planet, but I checked them out on an oscilloscope to see how much AC noise is on them, and it varied greatly from one to the other. However, the amount of hum didn't change between supplies; it was always loud.
One other data point: when the guitar input jack was unplugged, there was no hum, even though the LED remained on (I thought maybe there was a switch on the input jack, but the LED shouldn't be on if this was so). But whether the input was connected to a guitar, another pedal, wireless receiver, or even a cable plugged into nothing, made no difference; it hummed as long as anything was plugged into the input jack.
Is it some sort of ground loop, since this unit was not originally designed to run off a DC supply instead of a battery? I don't know - I don't wish to destroy it, so I haven't taken it completely apart. I've done enough to it by drilling a hole in the side, and replacing the original black insulating foam (which rotted away) with orange insulating foam (which will not rot)...
So, does anyone have any ideas?
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