I have a very odd noise problem in the house I'm renting at present, and I'm posting on the chance that someone here has seen something like it.
The noise itself plays havoc with single-coil guitar pickups. It sounds like ~120Hz with a regular phasing effect added, four of these phasing cycles about once per second, then a pause, then four again. It emanates as a very coherent point-source field from a square protrusion in a downstairs exterior wall that, as far as I've been able to determine, contains a heating return duct from upstairs that goes into the slab foundation at the floor. Using a filter choke as a field detector, I measure up to 11mV on an AC voltmeter (battery operated), and it's consistent in strength and direction all the way from floor to ceiling downstairs. I can measure the field outside, but it's weaker, so it seems to be originating inside.
A little backstory: this house was built in 1947 on a slab foundation. It's actually a duplex (though not used as one at present) with two electrical boxes, one upstairs and one downstairs. The original system was two-wire only, but during a partial renovation in the 1980s, some new three-wire circuits were added to handle appliances like a dryer. Also, though she's a good friend, I have to say that the owner of the house had a tendency to hire people to do things like wiring and plumbing who are both cheap and seem down on their luck. (It seems to make her feel good that she's giving them work.) I've found and fixed a number of problems.
Turning the downstairs electrical box off via the Main switch has no effect on the noise. Turning the upstairs box off cuts the noise voltage almost exactly in half. Cutting both boxes off reduces it slightly more, but not much. I measure no field at the ducts in the furnace room, only in the wall. And, based on what I know about the routing of the wiring, I wouldn't expect for there to be any electric wiring where I'm finding the noise.
I can access the metal heating duct upstairs, and I measure 3VAC difference between it and the closest AC socket neutral wire.
Any advice on the next step to track this down? My instinct is to investigate the grounding of both circuit breaker boxes.
Or should I call Ghost Hunters? ;-)
The noise itself plays havoc with single-coil guitar pickups. It sounds like ~120Hz with a regular phasing effect added, four of these phasing cycles about once per second, then a pause, then four again. It emanates as a very coherent point-source field from a square protrusion in a downstairs exterior wall that, as far as I've been able to determine, contains a heating return duct from upstairs that goes into the slab foundation at the floor. Using a filter choke as a field detector, I measure up to 11mV on an AC voltmeter (battery operated), and it's consistent in strength and direction all the way from floor to ceiling downstairs. I can measure the field outside, but it's weaker, so it seems to be originating inside.
A little backstory: this house was built in 1947 on a slab foundation. It's actually a duplex (though not used as one at present) with two electrical boxes, one upstairs and one downstairs. The original system was two-wire only, but during a partial renovation in the 1980s, some new three-wire circuits were added to handle appliances like a dryer. Also, though she's a good friend, I have to say that the owner of the house had a tendency to hire people to do things like wiring and plumbing who are both cheap and seem down on their luck. (It seems to make her feel good that she's giving them work.) I've found and fixed a number of problems.
Turning the downstairs electrical box off via the Main switch has no effect on the noise. Turning the upstairs box off cuts the noise voltage almost exactly in half. Cutting both boxes off reduces it slightly more, but not much. I measure no field at the ducts in the furnace room, only in the wall. And, based on what I know about the routing of the wiring, I wouldn't expect for there to be any electric wiring where I'm finding the noise.
I can access the metal heating duct upstairs, and I measure 3VAC difference between it and the closest AC socket neutral wire.
Any advice on the next step to track this down? My instinct is to investigate the grounding of both circuit breaker boxes.
Or should I call Ghost Hunters? ;-)
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