Ferrite on audio leads passing near PC?

Don wrote in news:Xns9BDC17F2C469E5D4AM2@69.16.185.247:

Yes. Small losses due to capacitance rarely matter in this case so close individual screens are good, and even over longer runs it's mainly an attenuation of higher frequencies well beyond those for audio except in runs of a hundred metres or more where it might best be considered differently.

You might lose signals to the other line causing crosstalk and reduced stereo width in much shorter runs if the channels are not screened from each other. It might not be significant but if for any reason you want one to be silent while the other is at full bore (studio effects and panning), it really pays to screen them separately.

Reply to
Lostgallifreyan
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You must not have seen the 'window equiped' PC cases all over the place now.

Reply to
Archimedes' Lever

Wouldn't that be 'raised the PARD rejection factor'? :-]

Because if it isn't periodic or random, and you know where the source is, the solution would be closer to the source.

Reply to
Archimedes' Lever

Get a new vid card that has HDMI out. Take the audio from the PC thru that.

Upgrade...

Reply to
Archimedes' Lever

I agree with (most) the other posters, ferrites are unlikely to help with a direct baseband audio signal being injected, and perhaps the easiest solution is use a longer cable that doesn't go as close to the CRT.

I'm thinking you could use audio transormers (which itself may be sensitive to the CRT's deflection coils from several feet away) at each end and run a balanced cable between them. "Star Quad" type configuration would be best to minimize/cancel interference. But all that gets expensive.

Another "expensive" idea - replace the CRT with one of the new-fangled flat-panel display things, surely they generate less interference, and they also take up less space.

Or move the CRT. Get a few phone books and/or encyclopedias to put under it and lift it up, just a few inches may help.

Reply to
Ben Bradley

hru

FOR ONCE I SEE YOU AS YOU SEE OTHERS - IDIOT

I AM PROTEUS

Reply to
proteusiiv

WHAT WHERE THE AUDIO LEADS SCREENED FOR COCAINUM OR STEROIDS?

YOU SHOULD USE SHEILDED CABLES INSTEAD "DON"

I AM PROTEUS

Reply to
proteusiiv

Reminds me of something that happened in the late '60s. I got dragged into a problem with a newly-commissioned ink drying oven on a web offset printing line. Temperature sensed with a type T thermocouple, driving a controller consisting of one of those "new-fangled" 709 op amp things driving a panel meter with another 709 as a comparator giving on/off set point control. Yes, they did things like that, back then.

The controller burst fired a 3-phase thyristor bridge, using, wait for it, unijunction oscillators. Whoever designed it (no names) must have felt mighty proud to be right at the cutting edge :-)

Problem was, the input 709 kept dying. It would run maybe half an hour, then poof. Maker's guy had been tearing his hair out for a week.

On the bench, the thing would run forever. Back on the machine, instant death. Voltages all within limits. It wasn't until I hefted a scope onto site to look at the supply waveforms that I found the tens of volts of common mode HF on the thermocouple every time the thyristors fired. Not only on the TC, on every bit of metal nearby. Ironically, the sales blurb claimed that it used zero-crossing switching and was RF immune, an absolute lie. (30 kilowatts, burst fired.)

Fifty cents worth of ferrite and ceramic caps cured it in half an hour.

--
"Electricity is of two kinds, positive and negative. The difference
is, I presume, that one comes a little more expensive, but is more
durable; the other is a cheaper thing, but the moths get into it."
                                             (Stephen Leacock)
Reply to
Fred Abse

sci.electr>

Recalling an old trick/cure with low mv level magnetic pickups for record players - use two conductors inside a shield and ground the shield at one end only to avoid a ground loop. It works well for

60/120Hz and I see no reason for it not to work at audio frequencies. No guarantees but it is worth a try.
--
Don Kelly
dhky@shawcross.ca
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Reply to
Don Kelly

Hi Bill, thanks for the detailed info. You're right that I was guessing about the idea of using a ferrite without really knowing the theory! :-)

I was making my assumption based on my observation that all the USB leads which have come with my dictation machines or MP3 players have a plastic "blob" on them.

I was told this blob is a ferrite and that it's purpose is to prevent trouble from interference. I didn't get told if the blob prevented "incoming" intereference affecting the signals on its lead or, alternatively, if the "blob" limited "outgoing" interference being generated by using the lead. From what you say, I guess the idea of the blob containing ferrite is incorrect.

Perhaps the blob does not contain a ferrite but something else? So I dug around and got this interesting web page.

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"This cable has a blob half way along the cable that converts from USB to serial and then connects to the serial interface in the phone. The chip inside the cable is a Prolific 2303 and this is how your operating system will report it. It is marked as for the LG VX1/10 but works fine on the VX4400.

There's a chip in their blob? WOW. Well I never use my blob leads! I use just ordinary USB leads and there seems to be no problem.

Admittedly in this case the lead carries *digital* signals which go to the USB port. By contrast, I had been asking about *analogue* audio on a shielded lead going into the line-in socket of a PC (or perhaps going to some other device).

(a) So what is really in the blobs in my leads? (EG on my Olympus WS-331M) The above link talks about conversion to serial but I don't think my blobs would need to do that.

(b) Whatever is in the blob, would one of those help reduce interference on my intended longer leads because the leads will run near equipment and will carry analogue audio signals?

Reply to
Don

Yes the blob located near to one end of the lead is there to stop radiated interference from the lead. Yes it is a ferrite tube. Note "From" not to.

--
Best Regards:
                     Baron.
Reply to
Baron

That's a great chart. I printed it out. I found my chosen suppliers didn't have several of the leads or even list Belden reference numbers in the same format as the table. Is the chart out of date?

After seeing your chart I went here.

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The Belden range is bewildering. Even the guides to cables are bewildering! For example:

Cable Finder Guide (780k)

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Residential Cables (1.2MB)

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It's too much!

Reply to
Don

Yup. For _whole systems_, CE is a labelling thing of little concern to consumer end users, and rules are openly ignored in the light of history that there really hasn't been a successful string of prosecutions in the UK on EMC rule compliance for PC assemblers, for a long time, if ever.

For commercial use in business, and supply of component assemblies made for eventual construction of systems for end users, EMC certifications and compliance are more found important and are often demanded in purchasing and import orders together with all the other legal safety stuff.

However the testing (and passes) of assemblies may be specific to a certain (and sometime fraudulent) system configuration available at the moment, which may not be all that relevent to the final users use!

Some read CE as 'Chinese Export' and take no further interest in independant verification of these tests ...

I quit that job a long time ago now, thankfully. ;-)

--
Adrian C
Reply to
Adrian C

No, CE means Can't Enforce.

John

Reply to
John Larkin

e

YOU ARE AN IDIOT

I AM PROTEUS

Reply to
proteusiiv

You obviously know nothing about shielding or emission standards.

Reply to
Archimedes' Lever

On 4/3/2009 12:10 AM Archimedes' Lever spake thus:

You obviously replied to a troll. You lose.

--
Made From Pears: Pretty good chance that the product is at least
mostly pears.
Made With Pears: Pretty good chance that pears will be detectable in
the product.
Contains Pears:  One pear seed per multiple tons of product.

(with apologies to Dorothy L. Sayers)
Reply to
David Nebenzahl

Your capacity to make a valid assessment rests at nil. You're a goddamned idiot.

Reply to
Archimedes' Lever

Yeah, a troll knows all about being an idiot.......

Reply to
Sjouke Burry

If the interference is magnetic radiation from the CRT deflection and (at startup) the automatic degaussing coil, ferrite will not help at all. Wires in the presence of an AC magnetic field will pick up a voltage. The only hope is to lay the wires parallel to the magnetic flux lines, or get them out of the area. Only MASSIVE shielding with Mu-Metal shields will help, by conducting the flux lines in the shield. I suppose in theory totally enclosing the wires in a string of ferrite rings would be going in this direction, but separate ferrite rings are no comparison to a solid Mu-metal shield. Usually these are used to protect CRTs, photomultipliers and vidicons from stray magnetic fields, and they certainly do work. I've never seen it used to protect a cable.

Putting a balanced-unbalanced transformer at each end of the cable would be another time-honored fix. Then you can have a truly balanced signal even with equipment that is unbalanced.

Jon

Reply to
Jon Elson

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