You don't know that it's a 'ground loop noise' when you touch the video camera blah blah blah. It's a hum, probably 60 Hz. Try grounding everything to the same point, instead of whatever you have going on now. Geez.
The camera, which was not connected to either my stereo system nor computer system with any wires whatsoever, uses a two prong AC plug and it was plugged to its own, dedicated, un-shared AC wall outlet directly, so there was no option to connect its "third prong" ground (or a "ground screw") to an alternate ground point. It's just a fully-sealed black plastic box and and I see it has the double square "double insulated" symbol on it. Anyway, I fixed the issue simply by not touching the camera during the recording session, which is now a dismantled project.
💯 great video, that good for the art of the audio & physic 👍👍
You don't know that it's a 'ground loop noise' when you touch the video camera blah blah blah. It's a hum, probably 60 Hz. Try grounding everything to the same point, instead of whatever you have going on now. Geez.
The camera, which was not connected to either my stereo system nor computer system with any wires whatsoever, uses a two prong AC plug and it was plugged to its own, dedicated, un-shared AC wall outlet directly, so there was no option to connect its "third prong" ground (or a "ground screw") to an alternate ground point. It's just a fully-sealed black plastic box and and I see it has the double square "double insulated" symbol on it. Anyway, I fixed the issue simply by not touching the camera during the recording session, which is now a dismantled project.
why so angry bro🤣