As a result of watching this tutorial I overcame my grounding loop problem simply by moving the phono power supply from a shared power board to a direct power point outlet. I would never have thought of that on my own. Thanks so much.
Thank you, this video helped me figure out my issue. I wouldn't have thought of a few of these suggestions. Turning from the built in pre-amp "phono" to "line" setting on my turn table was the solution I needed to eliminate the hum.
This video helped me nail that it was indeed the grounding loop that was the issue on my dad's old JVC QL-A7. A good clean of the connection underneath the turntable and it was gone :)
Well done, a great guide. A further cause with vintage turntables, for example 1970's belt drive decks, can be mechanical feedback from the motor. Often the motor was isolated using rubber mounts, and these can harden with age, loosing their suppleness and hence ability to absorb vibration from the motor . Often they can be restored to original suppleness using soap and hot water, rubber restorer, glycerine or platanclene print roller restorer
Thanks so much!!! I originally thought I had a ground issue. Feedback is culprit. I have the over amplification issue because at low volume everything is fine but, as soon as I turn it up above 1/3 volume I hear a bass feedback coming through. Not a buzz like I originally thought. Kudos!!!
@@SSinatra I stopped listening to vinyl, so technically I fixed it. I haven't tried it yet but I was going to try a ridiculously long grounded rca cable. I should have known better than to try a turntable on a setup with PA amplifiers.
I recently bought a 3rd Numark tt-100 turntable that was faulty & for parts & spares. I however gave it ( as always ) a chance at resurrection & I got it working straight away! But there is an sometimes intermittent & sometimes fluctuating hum & buzz when the music is not playing. It isn't terrible, as even low sound hides the buzzing. But I want it gone & I will continue to seek sources to get me there. I had trouble with buzzing from the grounding loop being wonky on 1 of my first pair & sorted that. But I enjoyed this video & to all others out here looking to enjoy quality sounds, good luck with the tinkering & always be safe in doing so! ❤️✌🏼🎼
Just bought a RT80 on black Friday and have it set up today. Notice there was a humming noise but couldn't figure out what caused the noise until found this video on RUclips. The humming noise was gone after I moved the wifi mesh 5 feet away from the turntable 🙂
I had the same problem. Just buzzing from one speaker, the left one. The right speaker was perfect. Trouble shooting I swapped the RCA cable, the speaker cables even the amp. Still nothing so the turntable must be the problem. As the guy suggested in this video, I removed the needle and re-mounted it. It worked. Buzzing stopped.
Absolutely brilliant putting all those elements together and analysing them one by one was great. I have only to put it all into practise. Great video lots of things i never even thought about many thanks Gerald south wales UK
What if I hear that first hum when the turntable is not spinning? But it goes away the second I start spinning, even before the needle drops. Emotiva BasX TA2, Project Tube Box S2 (phono preamp), Technics SL-1500C turntable, Audio-Technica VM540ML/H, KLH Model 5 speakers, SVS SB2000 sub (though, this is not even powered on much of the time)
Great video! I did everything you said but when bringing the volume higher to 55 on my system the resonance is still coming, when down to 50 is stops …. Still can’t figure this out.
If you changed your catridge and still getting feedback hum after following the video tips do check that the 4 wires connected to the cartridge are properly matched to each pin i.e. R and L ground , R and L positive There's no standard pin configuration mismatching will lead to issues i.e. feedback hum. Happy listening.
I have an Audio-Technica AT-LP120XBT-USB turntable connected to a soundbar system (which includes a subwoofer) by Bluetooth. I have no receiver and/or pre-amp. Just the turntable and Bluetooth soundbar system. If I turn the volume up on the soundbar above about 60% I begin getting a very bad humming sound. If I turn the subwoofer off it stops. I've tried placing the subwoofer on a foam bad to isolate vibrations thru the floor and that didn't help. I move the subwoofer as far away from the turntable as possible (approx. 20') and that didn't help. If I turn the subwoofer off while playing a record the humming stops. I checked the turntable cartridge and it seems fine. Listening to the TV through the soundbar produces no hum. Just the turntable. I've read that this could be a grounding issue (ground loop) and the fix is to ground it to your receiver or pre-amp but I am using neither. Also, the turntable and the soundbar are around 10' apart from one another. Can you give me any suggestions on how to fix this issue? It's very annoying.
I have the same turntable, it produces bass sound if I touch it even slightly. I am going crazy with it, I was thinking of returning it. I tried hooking ground wire to a “Marshal Stanmore II” (powered bluetooth speaker) but its the same. Did you find any help?
It seems like I have a ground loop buzz. And there is no ground on my turntable, hence it has a built-in preamp. Will try to use the ground cable on the screw anyways. Thanks for the tips!
My Magnavox record changer hum comes from the mount for the tonearm and not the tonearm. Where the tonearm sets on a vertical "axle" at rear corner has the hum. Intermittent hum as I touch it. What causes this and what can I do to get rid of that hum? It's like something is not grounded properly and affects the sound. I replaced the needle and it is not the needle. Thanks.
I disconnected every single appliance in my house and the humming noise still won’t go away. I recently got the RT82 and also tried everything in the video. Anyone has tips on what to do?
Thank you for this tutorial. I was able to solve the buzzing sound in my very old, large cabinet radio/record player. The phono connectors just needed to be reseated.
My record player make a thumping noise when the drum bass plays. Only on certain records mostly the first or thru first part of 2nd song. It feels like the arm is not secure. I put my finger on back of arm then thumping bass or rattle is gone. Any thoughts?
I have an AT-120 with a preamp/USB switch. When I connect the turntable to my laptop via USB, I get a high-pitched mosquito hum. I can remove this hum in Adobe Audition by selecting it as a noise print, but is there a better way of eliminating it? Like disconnecting the ground wire or something?
Hi if someone could help. I am using a musical fidelity amplifer class A100 50W per channel. I have ground it to the amp. After playing the record for awhile, it start to hum. The solution to it is, I tab the amplifier turning nob. ( the circle round selection nob where you turn the nob to select CD, Phono etc). That is the one that i just tab it and the hum is gone. And 3 mins later, the hum came back again. Is that my Amp issue? For information, my speaker is a MS10 8 ohms speaker, is that causing the problem that harm my amp? Some people say i should use a 4 ohms speaker... thanks in advance.
Hello. I bought a Pioneer PL-Z81 hifi set in 1970. Amp gave up recently. New Yamaha amp. Now a buzz through speakers when using turntable, which has plastic body. Have looked inside, but don't know where to attach a ground wire, apart from screws in the plastic body. HELP. THANKS.
Does it matter if the ground wire is connected between the washer and ground screw? Or should the washer and screw be over the ground wire? Thx in advance 😊
Sometimesy receiver sounds louder on the left channel, but it is not the reciever I have connected my turntable and a CD player to the same receiver, the weird thing is that when my reciever sounds louder on the left channel when playing my turntable, I turn on the equalizer that is connected to a CD player not to the turntable, voila!! The sound on the right channel of the reciever is equal to that in the Left channel, and sound is better!! Crispier and cleaner. What could it he? May the reciever need more grounding? That when I turn on the equalizer that is connected to the CD player that obviously is connected to the aux input sends more grounding ?
It might be the azimuth of your cartridge/stylus needs adjusting. I believe if the stylus is not centered perfectly up and down then whichever side of the groove the stylus is digging into more will be the side the speaker sounds louder
Great question! The sound you hear is coming directly from the stylus. This sound is the actual audio direct from the grooves and is picked up by the cartridge and sent to your preamp/speakers.
I got overamplification but im using active speakers and there's only one type RCA input, how should i change my external pre amp to CD input? Do I really need an amplifier and passive speakers to fix this? FYI, my turntable is Crosley cruiser without built in pre amp. Or is it because of my cheap turntable
Thankyou for your great advice, after switching my cables about, I realized it was the stylus what was the problem & your suggestions sorted out the problem, Once again thanks for the informative advice 👍👍
If you have a Reference series turntable, the speed selector dial only controls the power to the motor. The turntable is still powered on and picking up signals. Feel free to reach out to our Customer Experience Team for further assistance!
hello my friend can you help me? I'm having problems with my vinyl playing record. the speaker keeps shifting back and forth at high volumes. the ground is correct. I replaced the cable with a new one. the right and left wires are correct. the device is far from the boxes. already reviewed the cables. I can't solve it. my setap devices are: amplifier pioneer elite a 20, and the vinyl record player is technics slq 2. voltage 120v.
Thanks for the video but non of it solved my feedback problem.. I really dont know what to do.. When I open my windows in my room however the feedback disappears.
Hi Serano, we're sorry to hear you're experiencing this. Please feel free to reach out to our Customer Experience Team via Support.Fluance.com for further assistance!
Hi I have the same issue. all is fine until I touch headshell, then I can hear hum, but at the same time when I touch with my 2nd hand amp shell or ground screw the it slightly can be heard.
My problem is when the record is spinning or playing I hear a lagging like sound enough bothersome to turn it off it's a Crosley AmFm radio Cd cassette Turntable Anyone can help me!?
I managed to resolve it. Its not as loud as it use to be very faint if you pay attention. What i did was i plugged in the turntable into a wall socket of its own. I kept the amp on a different socket and my phono stage uses a battery. Try minimising the amount of plugs on one socket.
Good advice, but make sure the grounding wire is attached to a machine screw into the metal chassis, not wood. The one you used sure looks like a wood screw.
As a result of watching this tutorial I overcame my grounding loop problem simply by moving the phono power supply from a shared power board to a direct power point outlet. I would never have thought of that on my own. Thanks so much.
Thank you, this video helped me figure out my issue. I wouldn't have thought of a few of these suggestions. Turning from the built in pre-amp "phono" to "line" setting on my turn table was the solution I needed to eliminate the hum.
Came here for help and was shocked to see an Aesop Rock record in the demo. He's the best and just put out a new album yesterday. Thumbs WAY up!!!
This video helped me nail that it was indeed the grounding loop that was the issue on my dad's old JVC QL-A7. A good clean of the connection underneath the turntable and it was gone :)
Well done, a great guide. A further cause with vintage turntables, for example 1970's belt drive decks, can be mechanical feedback from the motor. Often the motor was isolated using rubber mounts, and these can harden with age, loosing their suppleness and hence ability to absorb vibration from the motor . Often they can be restored to original suppleness using soap and hot water, rubber restorer, glycerine or platanclene print roller restorer
Thanks. Doing the little twisty twisty on the RCA cables helped a LOT!
Thanks so much!!! I originally thought I had a ground issue. Feedback is culprit. I have the over amplification issue because at low volume everything is fine but, as soon as I turn it up above 1/3 volume I hear a bass feedback coming through. Not a buzz like I originally thought. Kudos!!!
How did you fix it?
@@frankrizzo2724did you ever fix it. i assume you had the same problem
@@SSinatra I stopped listening to vinyl, so technically I fixed it. I haven't tried it yet but I was going to try a ridiculously long grounded rca cable. I should have known better than to try a turntable on a setup with PA amplifiers.
I recently bought a 3rd Numark tt-100 turntable that was faulty & for parts & spares. I however gave it ( as always ) a chance at resurrection & I got it working straight away! But there is an sometimes intermittent & sometimes fluctuating hum & buzz when the music is not playing. It isn't terrible, as even low sound hides the buzzing. But I want it gone & I will continue to seek sources to get me there. I had trouble with buzzing from the grounding loop being wonky on 1 of my first pair & sorted that. But I enjoyed this video & to all others out here looking to enjoy quality sounds, good luck with the tinkering & always be safe in doing so! ❤️✌🏼🎼
Just bought a RT80 on black Friday and have it set up today. Notice there was a humming noise but couldn't figure out what caused the noise until found this video on RUclips. The humming noise was gone after I moved the wifi mesh 5 feet away from the turntable 🙂
Fixed!!! Definitely a ground loop. Stupid me never hooked up the ground. So glad I have my turntable sounding awesome once again.
Thanks!!
I was hopeful, but all hum in the right, all tunes in the left. The balance knob is my only saving grace.
I had the same problem. Just buzzing from one speaker, the left one. The right speaker was perfect. Trouble shooting I swapped the RCA cable, the speaker cables even the amp. Still nothing so the turntable must be the problem. As the guy suggested in this video, I removed the needle and re-mounted it. It worked. Buzzing stopped.
@Alan-jw2iv thanks for the tip! I'll give it a shot, although I already bought another one.
Wow it was my speakers being on the same surface as my turntable. Bought speaker stands n my setup loos and sounds amazing. Thank you
This is a great and helpful video. Unfortunately, my table is still emitting ground loop noise.
Very helpful! Thank you for regained sanity!
This helped, surprisingly it helped change the power connections
Best guide for vibration/ feedback on turntables Thanks
Absolutely brilliant putting all those elements together and analysing them one by one was great. I have only to put it all into practise. Great video lots of things i never even thought about many thanks Gerald south wales UK
What if I hear that first hum when the turntable is not spinning? But it goes away the second I start spinning, even before the needle drops. Emotiva BasX TA2, Project Tube Box S2 (phono preamp), Technics SL-1500C turntable, Audio-Technica VM540ML/H, KLH Model 5 speakers, SVS SB2000 sub (though, this is not even powered on much of the time)
Avery good explanation to get the buzz out of a turntable
This is a great, informative video. Thank you!
Great video! I did everything you said but when bringing the volume higher to 55 on my system the resonance is still coming, when down to 50 is stops …. Still can’t figure this out.
If you changed your catridge and still getting feedback hum after following the video tips do check that the 4 wires connected to the cartridge are properly matched to each pin i.e. R and L ground , R and L positive
There's no standard pin configuration mismatching will lead to issues i.e. feedback hum.
Happy listening.
I have an Audio-Technica AT-LP120XBT-USB turntable connected to a soundbar system (which includes a subwoofer) by Bluetooth. I have no receiver and/or pre-amp. Just the turntable and Bluetooth soundbar system. If I turn the volume up on the soundbar above about 60% I begin getting a very bad humming sound. If I turn the subwoofer off it stops. I've tried placing the subwoofer on a foam bad to isolate vibrations thru the floor and that didn't help. I move the subwoofer as far away from the turntable as possible (approx. 20') and that didn't help. If I turn the subwoofer off while playing a record the humming stops. I checked the turntable cartridge and it seems fine. Listening to the TV through the soundbar produces no hum. Just the turntable. I've read that this could be a grounding issue (ground loop) and the fix is to ground it to your receiver or pre-amp but I am using neither. Also, the turntable and the soundbar are around 10' apart from one another. Can you give me any suggestions on how to fix this issue? It's very annoying.
I have the same turntable, it produces bass sound if I touch it even slightly. I am going crazy with it, I was thinking of returning it. I tried hooking ground wire to a “Marshal Stanmore II” (powered bluetooth speaker) but its the same. Did you find any help?
If my turntable doesn’t have a ground on the back can I still put one on a screw of TT body ?
Great tutorial. No. 6 fixed the problem : )
It seems like I have a ground loop buzz. And there is no ground on my turntable, hence it has a built-in preamp. Will try to use the ground cable on the screw anyways. Thanks for the tips!
Great video, but sadly, i have tested everything but i keep hearing a really loud buzz sound, what do I do? My record player is a Technics SL-B202
Same here. I have an Akai ap 206.
My Magnavox record changer hum comes from the mount for the tonearm and not the tonearm. Where the tonearm sets on a vertical "axle" at rear corner has the hum. Intermittent hum as I touch it. What causes this and what can I do to get rid of that hum? It's like something is not grounded properly and affects the sound. I replaced the needle and it is not the needle. Thanks.
I have the same issue and have spent hours trying to resolve it. To date I have still not resolved the issue.
What mast to do if my dual 1015 have not grand? Its have just rca utput
Where i must connect the g ?
I disconnected every single appliance in my house and the humming noise still won’t go away. I recently got the RT82 and also tried everything in the video. Anyone has tips on what to do?
Thank you for this tutorial. I was able to solve the buzzing sound in my very old, large cabinet radio/record player. The phono connectors just needed to be reseated.
Worked perfectly thank you!!!
Great video! Resolved.
My record player make a thumping noise when the drum bass plays. Only on certain records mostly the first or thru first part of 2nd song. It feels like the arm is not secure. I put my finger on back of arm then thumping bass or rattle is gone. Any thoughts?
THANK YOU SOOOOOO MUUUUCHHHHHH BEST TUTORIAL IVE EVER SEEN YOOOO
Got a Sony pl 212 dirrect drive jumping when volume up
I have an AT-120 with a preamp/USB switch. When I connect the turntable to my laptop via USB, I get a high-pitched mosquito hum. I can remove this hum in Adobe Audition by selecting it as a noise print, but is there a better way of eliminating it? Like disconnecting the ground wire or something?
Beautiful! great advice
Replaced the phone leads with another set and the hum disappeared! Thanks for the tip.
Thank you, as soon as I connected the ground from the turntable to the receiver the humming stopped. Now when I listen, it is only me humming.
Excellent!
THank you for the tip (Screw for ground noise)
Thank you! skipped the obvious. Cables. switched amps. cables were fine on old amp. switched out and now the RT85 sounds saweeeet!
Thanks switching the switch on the turntable to Phono fixed my issue!!! the manual of the turntable said otherwise lol
Is it safe to further ground the phono preamp to the receiver (through a wire) to eliminate hum?
Hi Kostas! If you don't have a ground terminal on your receiver, it is safe to ground to a screw on the chassis of your receiver.
Great video, thanks!
Loving that aesop rock album, one of my favorites 😊 thanks for the great tips!
Hi if someone could help. I am using a musical fidelity amplifer class A100 50W per channel. I have ground it to the amp. After playing the record for awhile, it start to hum. The solution to it is, I tab the amplifier turning nob. ( the circle round selection nob where you turn the nob to select CD, Phono etc). That is the one that i just tab it and the hum is gone. And 3 mins later, the hum came back again. Is that my Amp issue? For information, my speaker is a MS10 8 ohms speaker, is that causing the problem that harm my amp? Some people say i should use a 4 ohms speaker... thanks in advance.
Excellent!
Mine makes a swirling, whooshing noise especially when playing newer, heavyweight vinyl. Any suggestions??
Be sure to check that the stylus body isn't dragging on the vinyl! For further assistance, our Customer Experience Team will be happy to help!
Thanks, helped me out a ton
Hello. I bought a Pioneer PL-Z81 hifi set in 1970. Amp gave up recently. New Yamaha amp. Now a buzz through speakers when using turntable, which has plastic body. Have looked inside, but don't know where to attach a ground wire, apart from screws in the plastic body. HELP. THANKS.
Sorry 1988
Does it matter if the ground wire is connected between the washer and ground screw? Or should the washer and screw be over the ground wire? Thx in advance 😊
Great question! You should connect it as close to the body of the turntable as possible under the washers.
@@FluanceSpeakers Thx for fast reply!😀
My turntable has built in speakers. Nothing works
Sometimesy receiver sounds louder on the left channel, but it is not the reciever I have connected my turntable and a CD player to the same receiver, the weird thing is that when my reciever sounds louder on the left channel when playing my turntable, I turn on the equalizer that is connected to a CD player not to the turntable, voila!! The sound on the right channel of the reciever is equal to that in the Left channel, and sound is better!! Crispier and cleaner. What could it he? May the reciever need more grounding? That when I turn on the equalizer that is connected to the CD player that obviously is connected to the aux input sends more grounding ?
It might be the azimuth of your cartridge/stylus needs adjusting. I believe if the stylus is not centered perfectly up and down then whichever side of the groove the stylus is digging into more will be the side the speaker sounds louder
Am I dumb or when I don’t have the volume up my needle plays the song and u could hear it from the turntable why is that? I have a 78 sony pst 30
Great question! The sound you hear is coming directly from the stylus. This sound is the actual audio direct from the grooves and is picked up by the cartridge and sent to your preamp/speakers.
THANKS!
I got overamplification but im using active speakers and there's only one type RCA input, how should i change my external pre amp to CD input? Do I really need an amplifier and passive speakers to fix this?
FYI, my turntable is Crosley cruiser without built in pre amp. Or is it because of my cheap turntable
It's possible the Crosley already has a preamp to play through its external speakers. Connecting this to another preamp will over-amplify it.
THANK YOU!!!
AESOP ROCK . Very good Very very good. lol
THANK YOU
My audio Technica doesn't have a ground cable
Thank you bro it was feedback from the internet router
Welcome 👍
Thanks! Very informative video.
thank you very much!
Sadly I can't fix the ground loop because there's not enough outlets in my flat :/
Thankyou for your great advice, after switching my cables about, I realized it was the stylus what was the problem & your suggestions sorted out the problem,
Once again thanks for the informative advice 👍👍
I'm still getting the sound from the amp even when the record deck is turned off .when the amp is on phono .even over output is fine
If you have a Reference series turntable, the speed selector dial only controls the power to the motor. The turntable is still powered on and picking up signals. Feel free to reach out to our Customer Experience Team for further assistance!
Cheers mate, sorted my problem. thank you.
hello my friend can you help me? I'm having problems with my vinyl playing record. the speaker keeps shifting back and forth at high volumes. the ground is correct. I replaced the cable with a new one. the right and left wires are correct. the device is far from the boxes. already reviewed the cables. I can't solve it. my setap devices are: amplifier pioneer elite a 20, and the vinyl record player is technics slq 2. voltage 120v.
Did you check to see if you need to adjust the Ohm setting from your receiver/amplifier to match your speakers?
Thanks for the video but non of it solved my feedback problem.. I really dont know what to do.. When I open my windows in my room however the feedback disappears.
We're sorry to hear that. It may help to add some dampening panels to the walls of the room. Removing the dust cover may also help.
@@FluanceSpeakers thanks.. I just figured out that if I adjust the weight knob and add more weight to the stylus onto the record it actually helped
I only get this when i touch the tone arm. Any advice?
Hi Serano, we're sorry to hear you're experiencing this. Please feel free to reach out to our Customer Experience Team via Support.Fluance.com for further assistance!
Hi I have the same issue. all is fine until I touch headshell, then I can hear hum, but at the same time when I touch with my 2nd hand amp shell or ground screw the it slightly can be heard.
@@KRZYCHCZARA Can you hear it when the needle is touching a record?
My problem is when the record is spinning or playing I hear a lagging like sound enough bothersome to turn it off it's a Crosley AmFm radio Cd cassette Turntable Anyone can help me!?
I managed to resolve it. Its not as loud as it use to be very faint if you pay attention. What i did was i plugged in the turntable into a wall socket of its own. I kept the amp on a different socket and my phono stage uses a battery. Try minimising the amount of plugs on one socket.
i seperated the ground wire from the rca cables, that helped a lot
my speaker was right in front of my turntable no wonder smh ...thanks again!
Good advice, but make sure the grounding wire is attached to a machine screw into the metal chassis, not wood.
The one you used sure looks like a wood screw.
Pull power cord, rotate it 180 degrees, reinstall into outlet
The ground loop sounds very aggressive
Thank you,
Sir how are you just taking this stuff apart 😭 I’m struggling over here
I get that noise that sounds like cell phone interference. :(
Sorry to hear that Robert! Please feel free to contact us at Support.Fluance.com/s/contact for assistance!
I also have noise like dial up modem
Isn’t that why they invented CD players, hipsters?
Just buy a cd player
thank you
Thank you