Title: EMI everwhere ! Post by: Nick on January 01, 2013, 09:05:43 pm EDIT
The EMI problem outlined in this post turned out to be due to a production problem with the Oscilloscope I bought to look for noise in my music system. More details of what happened with the scope are given in my post on page two ( http://www.phasure.com/index.php?topic=2404.msg27276#msg27276 ) but I wanted to save anyone wasting time reading thought the post. Regards, Nick. I wanted to post on the subject of the effect of environmental EMI noise. I am on the journey of understanding and diagnosing an audible "noise" problem in my system any pointer / experience that anyone can offer would be greatly appreciated (I know there are some experienced engineers amongst us). The audible sound quality issues manifest themselves as a number of sound quality symptoms. It is possible that some people may also be experiencing them to greater / lesser extent possibly without knowing it. The audiable symptoms of the problem include:
Until recently I had worked on the basis that there could be a single rouge bit of equipment in my system causing the problem (eg a part of the PC, the NOS1, Gainclones, speaker cables etc, etc, etc). My approach was therefore to replace the system components one by one until I stumbled on the cause. The problem is that with 60 % of my system changed the problem was still most defiantly there so a new approach was needed. Enter the oscilloscope that I had been promising to buy myself for many years, at last I have gained some “eyes” to look into what is actually happening. So how did it look with the oscilloscope ? .... not good, that's for sure ! It turns out that on virtually a wet bit of string anywhere in my house I can pick up air bourn interference in the 100Mhz range which happens in short pulses, the pulses have a frequency of about 64khz. This stuff is EVERYWHERE, on the mains, on my speaker cables, in the digital and analogue sections of my NOS1 and my Gainclones (who needs a PC to create noise when you have this much about already) . When I say wet bit of string mean for instance the 30 cm length of untwisted cable in the picture below which is picking up 0.6us bursts of ~100mhz at an amplitude of 10mv ! (http://imageshack.us/a/img201/9387/imageaza.jpg) The general bursts of ~100mhz do have a pattern of sorts this is a sample of the general profile if the ~100mhz spikes – ouch ! (the vertical scale is 2mv per division). (http://imageshack.us/a/img836/1373/image3wj.jpg) And a closer look at one of the larger spikes showing the 100mhz wave form. (http://imageshack.us/a/img41/1761/image2pwu.jpg) So for a few weeks I have been trying to understand where the EMI is coming from and what it is doing to my audio system. So far as the system is concerned since basic Gainclones have no regulation on power supply and no HF rejection on their inputs and outputs the airbourne EMI is certainly causing problems. I think the effect on the Gainclones and the interaction of this effect with my NOS1 might well be causing the NOS’s word clock signal to become out of sync with the bit clock as 32bit words are processed by the DAC section. I think this may be resulting in LSB word data from one 32bit word entering later adjacent 32bit words at more significant bit locations. This super jitter however it is happening just ruins music quality. A couple of things it is important to point out are that this defiantly a Gainclone / DAC interaction problem. As I mentioned before, my friends Musical Fidelity DAC (played using SPDIF from a M2Tech) exhibits the problems even more than my NOS1. Whilst using an amplifier with better RF rejection (A Denon midi component as it happens) the problem goes away completely so far as I can tell, the only issue with this solution is that the sound quality of the Denon is way below the potential of the Gainclones. So where is the RF coming from ?? I checked the house and the immediate area round my village expecting to find an SMPS about to explode somewhere close but nothing so far as I could see. I did a lot of reading about EMI on the net about possible sources and started driving round in my car with the oscilloscope to “look” for the source (fortunately the scope runs from a battery as well as the mains). This evening I drove around half the county trying to work out where the source was. After a couple of hours I ended up parked at the base of a 100m transmitter 20 miles from my house with the amplitudes of the 100mhz bursts 7 X higher than back at the house. I think it is a TV transmitter. The culprit ?? So I have some questions which I need to research now.
No resolution as yet for these these points, I might still be looking in entirely the wrong direction but I think there is smoke here so the fire should be close as they say. If anyone has any experience of this stuff I would love to hear your thoughts, anything that can shorten the path to sorting this out would be fantastic. From an EMI buzzing Suffolk. Nick. Ps I just hope I done have to build a copper clad faraday cage with no windows and power my system from batteries before I can listen to it at its best ;) Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: manisandher on January 01, 2013, 09:19:33 pm Hey Nick, excellent post.
I can't really help you other than to say my oscilloscope is coming out tomorrow. I'll see what sort of readings I'm getting at 100MHz and let you know. I don't have a copper-clad Faraday cage, but do have the 'studio' in my cellar totally lined with 'plasterer's wire mesh' connected to ground (effective enough to take my mobile phone from 3 bars 3G just outside to 0 bars inside). One thing I will do is see how much EMI at 100MHz is eliminated with this approach. On a last note, for really serious late-night listening, I always disconnect my wifi router and DECT phone. This simple step gives me a sweeter and more musical sound. Have you tried this? Good luck with your quest. Mani. Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: Nick on January 01, 2013, 09:46:09 pm Mani,
Thanks. I did suspecting DECT and WiFi but could not see anything worrying with the 'scope. I agree that it's going to be a good precaution to turn both off when going for best possible sound. I was skimming arround on the net just now. A little more information on the transmitter that I ended up parked under. The tower is 300m high not the 100m I had guesstimated !!. A summary of output is as follows. CURRENT TRANSMISSIONS Digital Television - No transmission Analogue Radio (FM) Kiss 105-108 FM: 106.4 20kW Digital Radio BBC National (Block 12B) Digital One (Block 11D) So the transmitter is for Radio not TV. Kiss FM seems to be verrry close to the frequency I am seeing. Now I need to understand if the signal structure I am seeing is normal for these services. It seems odd that there should be such pulsed variation of the signal intensity. More time on the net needed.... Happy new year, Nick. Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: PeterSt on January 01, 2013, 09:54:37 pm Nick, man ! To-tal-ly interesting. Yea, well, sad it hurts you all so much.
Heck, I'm dying to hop over just out of interest ... Djeezzz ... For others who don't know : Nick has been through all sorts of problems at least me myself an I never were able to understand. What about perceiving sheer (though distorted) music without even any D/A section operable. What has been spend on this all together ? a 200 emails ? I have said so often : hounted house. UK-familiar. But with a scope you will hunt down the real ghosts ? Damn Nick. You must be getting somewhere ... Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: PeterSt on January 01, 2013, 10:10:18 pm Nick,
Ciska here, our NOS1 builder as we know by now, was shown this topic as some sort of teaser, and she right away comes up with these links : http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2231351/Homes-robbed-TV-signal-new-4G-mobile-network-10-000-reconnected.html http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2145566/4G-mobile-signal-hit-TV-reception-UK-warns-culture-minister.html So you might investigate whether 4G is transmitted from this tower. No time to digest this myself. Dinner time and such. Peter (well, merely Ciska) Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: Nick on January 01, 2013, 10:32:24 pm Hey Ciska,
Thanks for the reading links above, I will check out what is being transmitted. The site for the transmitter only lists radio services, but that is not to say that it may not be out of date and other services are not being transmitted. I looking for information on the DAB transmosion standard just now. There might be another hit on the frequesncy I am seeing. "Following the revision by the CEPT multilateral meeting which took place in Constanţa, Romania, 02-04 July 2007 the WI95revCO07 Special Arrangement governs T-DAB in the frequency bands T-DAB in the frequency bands 47-68 MHz, 87.5 - 108 MHz and 230-240 MHz." The thing that is unexpected is that the signal pulses so much with 10s of khz modulation. The stronger pulses are must be circa 10 to 20x greater than the base transmission level. Its these pluses that seem to be the problem. I am still not sure exactly how the DAC gainclone problem happens when excited by these pulses but even with the NOS1 turned OFF and still connected (you would think it would ground the amp inputs) and the mv 100mhz pulses are there on the amp inputs and amplified by the Gainclones. They appear as a very noisy output pulse on the speaker connections in the 10s of mv range as a pulse in the 10s of khz range (the Gainclones cannot pass the 100mHz signal). Not good at all.... Don’t let me keep you from your dinner :-), Kind regards, Nick. Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: PeterSt on January 02, 2013, 10:54:55 am Nick,
I don't know much about this, did not sort out a thing and did not Google, but I'm afraid we'd have to consider this normal. Consider this as how radio is and we all live with that. So when I'm right ("radio is"), the culprit must be on your side, hence must be solved on your side. What I would do first is brew myself a very short interlink. Try to use the same material (for cable) as you have now, or otherwise create a normal length you use of the same material as this short cable you are going to make. Now compare the two at the amp output; If there's a difference and the short cable shows less of this interference, start thinking about an interlink with sufficient shielding. However, maybe I wouldn't take the effort (but I'd use Triax to start with - well, double shielded coax that is like for sat receivers that should be used) ... and find yourself a sheet of mumetal. Possibly very hard to get in a shop, but the internet will provide it somewhere. Get yourself some money for it because you will need to cover all of your interlink (make a roll of it I'd say). You could first try it on your short test cable. Remember, only when the shorter cable helps in the first place. The above shouldn't help a thing because you claim that with the Denon there's no problem. However, this seems inconsistent to me re the 5mV on the NOS1 outputs. So ? Well, you could try to apply the same test with the USB cable. Does a longer look worse on the NOS1 outputs ? For your GainClone, think about ANY shorter or longer sticking out (loose) wire, resistor etc. So, you can have a test situation in there and can have cut a resistor at one side. Wrong, because now it's an antenna (look how your wet wire operates). In the NOS1 there shouldn't be much of this (unnecessary long bare wires etc. and what is there was unavoidable (and still should be). Although you will have set up a ground scheme that works for you at the moment (or seemed to), experiment with PE connections again. You even might - the other way around - create yourself a mains cable for the NOS1 which has no PE wire in it. But otherwise you can remove the ground connection to the cabinet right near the power inlet. Do notice that PE is only connected to the cabinet and nothing else. Carefully consider whether you implied a connection to something else yourself or thought to use the cabinet for some ground. Remove that again. Not permanently, but to see whether things change. I can imagine that the cabinet acts as a receptor especially when connected to PE. But when not connected to PE also (and then connect to PE for trials). You may wiggle the USB cable from the input terminal to the interface inside and then for distance to the chassis bottom. You can try to change angles of your apparatus and try to avoid the waves (which I think won't help at this high frequency). Although you see it on the mains, do not think right away it comes from the mains; most probably you feed it yourself to it. See above NOS1 - PE example. But also think this may bring you the solution; find that antenna in the house (hence disconnect everything and keep on measuring the mains). Prove to yourself that it's not your measuring wires picking it up (not sure how to do that; measure something in your car ?) When you found sources to change, again get that mumetal. But read yourself into how to apply it. Do notice that there's no free lunch and that although the shielding may work, at the sides and holes etc. there will be even more collection. You key is to bend off the radiation in the direction of your liking. Again, read yourself into applying it. One addition from my own experience : You may run into the idea of contacting the head of the tower (he will stand on the top of it) with a "what the f*ck you think you are doing here". Well, useless. Once frequencies are above a certain frequency (I have 14KHz on the top of my head) there are no rules for it. But worse : because no rules/regulations exist there will also nobody there to help you. It is not needed (for testing / certificates etc.) and the test equipment won't even be available. You will be on your own (but have Google). 1c Peter Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: Jud on January 02, 2013, 12:56:00 pm There are cables I own that are made of mu metal, if I recall correctly. They are the best sounding ones I have, other than the Mapleshade/Omega Mikro. They were called Lindsey-Geyer when I bought them decades ago - don't know if they are still available.
If they are not available, I have one set of spares (set of analog interlinks, I think 2m, maybe 1.5) and likely another set will become spare soon. If you're interested, PM me and I could send them along. Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: Jud on January 02, 2013, 06:00:05 pm Well, the Lindsay-Geyer cables are still "available," if you consider that adjective to apply to $650 for a 1 meter pair. I will lend you my spare pair gratis if you'd like, to see if they work in your environment.
Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: Nick on January 02, 2013, 07:53:49 pm Well, the Lindsay-Geyer cables are still "available," if you consider that adjective to apply to $650 for a 1 meter pair. I will lend you my spare pair gratis if you'd like, to see if they work in your environment. Jud, Thanks for the kind offer. 650 dollars per meter per ouch ! Then again I have been looking at the price of mu metal and its not cheap or easy to use, so there could be quite a cost associated with building the cables. They could be very useful. I have ordered an amerture radio (radio ham) handbook on emi diagnosis and management. I think the problem is going to need a systematic approach. The radio signal everywhere in the system, speaker cables, amp inputs, power supplies, inputs, throughout my amp and NOS etc. Currently there is only one point where PE and signal earth are bonded and that is back in the PC. The NOS and amp signal grounds are not connected to PE. This means that efforts to shield components has to involve local PE grounding within each component. Fitltering of psu, signal or amp output noise to signal ground currently means the noise has to pass all the way back to back to the PC signal ground to reach a PE (earth) connection. This has the potential to route the noise from the amp and speaker wiring (big aerials) back through the NOS (I think this may be a part of the problem) to the PC. Because of the length of the path to PE ground and the VHF frequency of the noise, the inductance and resistance of such a long path the seems to be making it hard to earth the noise. This is going to tale some working out. I am guessing the answer may lie in a joint approach of minimising the opportunity for the system to act as an arial (as Peter suggests) and working out how to run noise from shields, psus and signal circuits back to PE / signal ground without spoiling the sound quality. This is going to be a step learning curve I think :( I am keen to do some reading to come up with an approach before I start trying things out so there may be a bit of a delay before I can try the cables if that is ok. I will post a couple more traces, boy there is lots of noise in the system.... Cheers, Nick. Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: Scroobius on January 02, 2013, 10:57:54 pm HI Nick - well I guess that explains a lot I wish you the best of luck it looks as though you have much work ahead. Might be an idea to bring that scope with you next time you come down here and compare yours with what a "normal" environment has.
Best of Luck Paul Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: Nick on January 03, 2013, 12:48:42 am Paul hi,
Thanks, we are thinking the same thing about taking some more normal measurements, it would be really useful. The joys of living < 15 miles from a 1000 foot 20kw transmitter !! I'm looking forwards to hearing your system, problem is I might end up wanting to move house :( Cheers, Nick. Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: PeterSt on January 03, 2013, 09:08:36 am Quote problem is I might end up wanting to move house :( That was the first suggestion here. But I said "no no, Nick's (hotel-)house is way too nice to leave behind". So don't you dare do that ! (wimpy :)) Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: Jud on January 03, 2013, 01:41:30 pm No problem at all, Nick, I will likely have a second spare pair by the time you want them.
If they would wind up being helpful and you would like to keep them, I am sure we could work out something satisfactory that isn't nearly in the stratospheric range these cables now apparently command. I hope they do help, but if they don't, then just send them back and all's fine. Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: christoffe on January 04, 2013, 04:22:29 pm http://www.monoandstereo.com/2011/06/why.html
Interesting to read! Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: PeterSt on January 06, 2013, 03:36:18 pm Quite applicable Joachim. Largely my story, but now with some drawings coming along with it. Good.
Peter Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: Nick on January 06, 2013, 05:40:10 pm http://www.monoandstereo.com/2011/06/why.html Interesting to read! Cristoffe hi, The article is bang on point for my problem ! I think all four of the fr interference types could apply here. The article also points out that VHF level signals only propagate short distance down power lines is useful. This is the final encoragement meded for me needed to invest in some decent quality shielded mains leads (RF is so good for justifying upgrades ;)). I am trying to read as much as possible before I start to making changes to the system, so this is a really useful article, thanks. Nick. Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: Nick on January 06, 2013, 06:36:00 pm Hi,
I said I would post a better trace of the VHF noise. This trace is recorded with more scope memory depth and shows a lot of transmission detail not apparent in the trace I placed in the first post. (http://imageshack.us/a/img547/64211/imagetru.jpg) The trace is taken from the speaker cables of the system with the pc dac and amp turned off. The 100mhz fm transmission is actually highly modulated, with approx 30db pulses at 60khz and lower level pulses at ~480khz. This looks much more difficult to deal with as a result. The noise extends from 10s of kHz to 100mhz. Word clock frequency in the my NOS is 706khz and bit clock at 22.6mhz you can see why this interference in the wrong locations in the system can hurt sound quality. Nick :( Edit - updates to the frequencies quoted to properly reflect the trace details. Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: PeterSt on January 06, 2013, 08:17:03 pm Nick,
By now it could be interesting to see whether you can capture a testsignal (a sine) by this means with the DAC section shut off. So, that you have some sort of carrier for it is new information, but how it can do it still beats me. The 100Mhz seems sufficient though to let it act as some sort of "interference D/A converter". But for example, you then must be able to see that the 100MHz is indeed doing this (the smallest spikes) hence the larger remain sticking out of the signal. I can't predict what you will see (if anything) and I have the idea that you will see it a kind of other way around : that signal being the carrier on which the high frequency modulates; possible the lower frequency. But, when this happens it will be the peaks riding on the signal which make the signal audible (because the amplitude gets higher). So, you could focus on the peaks of it all to "wobble" along with that test signal, which signal itself you won't see (now the peaks all show on the same maximum level). Is this important ? I guess not. But a small explanation how without D/A converter digital (music) data is converted to audible sound (though distorted) would be welcome. haha Peter Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: Nick on January 06, 2013, 11:19:45 pm Peter hi,
Thanks for suggesting the test, I see what you are saying about the peaks possible carrying the decoded signal, it would be facinating to understand what could decode the signal with the DAC off, i'll try to capture some traces. Best Nick. Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: Nick on February 09, 2013, 08:26:00 pm One problem that's proved to be nothing to do with noise, it's a bit embarrassing but quite funny :blush1: I have blamed everything in sight for the past 3 years for weird and frankly cr*p Bass. 'Noise', DAC, amp, OS, mains, they have all come under suspicion as possible causes of the problem. Paul and my friend Pete were most polite when they listened to the bass at my place, I'm still waiting to receive their claims for damaged hearing ;) . Armed with the new oscilloscope and a 40hz tone track I decided to trace through the system from DAC to active subs to see if there was anything amiss. The real culprit ? Each of the active subwoofers on my Avantguard Duo's has a gain knob and a cross over frequency knob to adjust these settings on the sub's internal amplifier. Now the right hand sub has always been the one that would just not work, always too loud or too quiet or just cr*p balance ever since the sub amp modules were upgraded about 4 years ago. With the amp module out of the left sub and poking about in the amp module, I noticed that the knob for the cross over setting was slipping on the potentiometer shaft, but is was just tight enough to not be obvious !! This means that the calibration mark on the knob could in effect be anywhere up to 360 degrees out from the actual setting on the potentiometer in the sub that sets the cross over point. Loads of swearing, followed by big smiles when I sat down to listen with subs properly matched and setup. I cannot say what a difference correct settings have made. What a hobby, never take anything for granted I guess. Nick. Ps after looking at the amp module i'v got a nice list of upgrades worked out so maybe even better bass is to come Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: AlainGr on February 09, 2013, 08:49:20 pm One problem that's proved to be nothing to do with noise, it's a bit embarrassing but quite funny :blush1: I have blamed everything in sight for the past 3 years for weird and frankly cr*p Bass. 'Noise', DAC, amp, OS, mains, they have all come under suspicion as possible causes of the problem. Paul and my friend Pete were most polite when they listened to the bass at my place, I'm still waiting to receive their claims for damaged hearing ;) . Armed with the new oscilloscope and a 40hz tone track I decided to trace through the system from DAC to active subs to see if there was anything amiss. The real culprit ? Each of the active subwoofers on my Avantguard Duo's has a gain knob and a cross over frequency knob to adjust these settings on the sub's internal amplifier. Now the right hand sub has always been the one that would just not work, always too loud or too quiet or just cr*p balance ever since the sub amp modules were upgraded about 4 years ago. With the amp module out of the left sub and poking about in the amp module, I noticed that the knob for the cross over setting was slipping on the potentiometer shaft, but is was just tight enough to not be obvious !! This means that the calibration mark on the knob could in effect be anywhere up to 360 degrees out from the actual setting on the potentiometer in the sub that sets the cross over point. Loads of swearing, followed by big smiles when I sat down to listen with subs properly matched and setup. I cannot say what a difference correct settings have made. What a hobby, never take anything for granted I guess. Nick. Ps after looking at the amp module i'v got a nice list of upgrades worked out so maybe even better bass is to come Do you mean that this EMI thing is solved ? Alain Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: Nick on February 10, 2013, 11:25:22 pm Alain hi,
This subwoofer settings are not the cause of the "noise" problems. I just found it funny that something a simple as setting knob slipping on its shaft had caused such a fustrating problem. The noise problems are still here, but for some reason at the moment the symptoms in my DAC are almost gone, this means that I can use my NOS1 at 8 and even 16x up sampling rates. There is still noise in the system particularly the amp but sound is much better. I will post a small update on the noise soon. Cheers, Nick. Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: AlainGr on February 11, 2013, 01:08:17 am Hi Nick,
Ah... I wasn't sure. Well at least there is one problem solved :) I will read on as it evolves :) Regards, Alain Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: music33 on February 11, 2013, 01:28:06 am I have also had troubles with EMI/EMF and have tried numerous things over the years. I recently tried the Stein Speaker Match and am just flabbergasted at the positive effect it had. In fact I didn't realize the true affect EMI/EMF was having on my system. At a minimum you should talk to Holger Stein as he knows about the subject of EMI and if you can try them out. Below is a link to a review which I think is spot. He has a plus version which is even better.
http://www.positive-feedback.com/Issue61/stein_speaker.htm Good luck. Title: Re: EMI everwhere ! Post by: Nick on July 01, 2013, 10:16:52 pm I have been waiting to post an update, all will become clear.
The post above outlines a nasty EMI problem that I thought may be the cause of noise related poor sound quality problems I have been having with my system for a looong time. It was driving me nuts trying to work out how so much EMI was in my domestic environment. Eventually i started to suspect the test equipment and I tried the oscilloscope in a number of places around the UK including Paul's house on a visit to listen to his music system. The noise level was exactly the same at every location. Humm what is the common factor ?... the oscilloscope. The realisation began to dawn, next google for Owon SDS7102 noise and this came up ! http://www.eevblog.com/forum/testgear/review-of-owon-sds7102/1065/ Tens of pages describing what people refer to as "SDS7102 ground noise". So it turns out the £400 Owon SDS7102 Oscilloscope is plagued with internally generated SMPS noise. Frankly it seems like Owon set some graduate on the design of the internal power supply boards and the result is a scope that is not even a toy in terms of reliable measurement. Any measured trace below about 1v is swamped in the internally generated noise. Owon as a company have their heads in the sand. There must be hundreds or thousands of customers with SDS7102 scopes that are as useful as a building brick. According to Owon this level of internally generated noise is normal and acceptable in a piece of test equipment. They will not respond to direct warrenty claimes of users (thier products are supposed to have 3 year warrenty...haha) and are basically hanging out all of their users to dry with an expensive and useless product. DO NOT BUY AN OWON SDS7102 OSCILLOSCOPE UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES. Rant over. (Peter if I have broken forum rules above please let me know and I will change the post) So onto the good / more interesting developments, in the end I still have a problem to solve in my music system so I bought a Rigol DS2072 oscilloscope, after a 5 week wait it was delivered a couple of days ago. It is an incredible instrument, I'm very very pleased with it. I will start a new thread on tracking down noise issue in my music system with the new scope. www.phasure.com/index.php?topic=2640.msg27277#msg27277 Regards, Nick. Edit - typos and add link to new post on system emi noise |