isomorphZeta
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- Joined
- May 17, 2023
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I'm just about at my wits end trying to troubleshoot this.
Just moved into a new house, and added some new equipment in the move, so there are a lot of variables at play here. Despite that, I've tried to be methodical in tracking down the issue.
Issue:
When powering on the KEF LS50W speakers (connected to the Onkyo TX-RZ50 AVR via the Front pre-out RCA jacks, from the Aux RCA jacks on the speakers), a moderately loud buzz is heard. If the AVR is switched off, this buzz gets very loud. If the KEF speakers are switched to a different input, no buzz is heard. This is the case for active inputs (Optical, connected to TV) and inactive inputs (wireless and bluetooth).
Previous setup:
Background:
At my previous house, with the previous setup, I had the KEF LS50W speakers connected to my Integra DRX-3.3 via the Zone 2 / Zone B (Line Out) RCA jacks, and had sound output to these speakers via Zone B. It wasn't ideal, but that AVR didn't have RCA pre-outs, so that was the only way I could get the KEF LS50W speakers to work with that setup. There was no buzz, no hum - no issues at all.
Moving to the new house, I introduced a bunch of new equipment and different configurations to muddy things up. After getting everything connected, I powered up the KEF speakers and was met with a horrible, very audible "buzz". Not a hum, but a distinct, low frequency, sawtooth-y buzz.
"Okay, so something's introducing noise. New house, something was wired up weird, or maybe one of the new pieces of equipment is causing this?"
I disconnected everything from the new AVR, and just had the KEF speakers connected to them via the RCA cables: buzz.
I moved the AVR power from the Furman power conditioner (some "power conditioner", huh?) to the another outlet on the same circuit: buzz.
I moved the KEF power to the same outlet as the AVR: buzz.
I moved both to a different circuit: buzz.
I tried different power cables, different RCA cables: buzz, buzz.
"Alright, so that means it's definitely a ground loop, right? I read a bunch about them, and they can be caused by poor grounding at your panel. The builder has cheaped out on other stuff - maybe it's a bad ground?"
Drove an 8' copper-clad ground rod as far into the ground as I could (hit bedrock at 6', so I lopped off the remainder), 8' away from existing ground rod, and connected it in series in what I believe to be an NEC-approved dual ground rod setup: buzz.
"They make products that supposedly kill ground loops, so how about I just try one of those?"
Bought this thing, hooked it up: buzz. Thought maybe I had it backwards, swapped the connection around: louder buzz.
"Well... how about I grab the old Integra AVR and hook it up the way I had it before; see if that quiets things down."
I hooked the old Integra DRX-3.3 up to the KEF LS50W speakers the way it used to be set up, plugged them both into the Furman conditioner: buzz.
Moved them both from the Furman to a different outlet on the same circuit: buzz.
Different circuit: buzz.
"What the hell?! Okay, so I keep seeing people mention cable TV boxes introducing noise. Ah, but I don't have mine hooked up yet... Suddenlink did install an Arris RFoG, though, and that's got RG6 coax that runs in the walls, so... let's look at that."
Disconnected the Arris RFoG device: buzz.
And that brings us to where I'm at today: out of ideas.
The issue clearly seems to have something to do with the KEF LS50W speakers, since the buzz is present on the Onkyo and Integra AVRs. But what the hell do I do to fix it? Short of selling the KEFs and just going for more traditional, passive speakers (which I'm honestly not at all opposed to at this point), I honestly don't know.
I'm hoping someone on here far more knowledgeable about this than me is reading this and thinking "Ah, yep, it's because [this]. You just need to do [that] and you'll stop pulling your hair out!"
Fingers crossed, and thank you all in advance!
Just moved into a new house, and added some new equipment in the move, so there are a lot of variables at play here. Despite that, I've tried to be methodical in tracking down the issue.
Issue:
When powering on the KEF LS50W speakers (connected to the Onkyo TX-RZ50 AVR via the Front pre-out RCA jacks, from the Aux RCA jacks on the speakers), a moderately loud buzz is heard. If the AVR is switched off, this buzz gets very loud. If the KEF speakers are switched to a different input, no buzz is heard. This is the case for active inputs (Optical, connected to TV) and inactive inputs (wireless and bluetooth).
Previous setup:
- HARDWARE
- AVR: Integra DRX-3.3
- SPEAKERS
- Front: KEF LS50W
- HARDWARE
- AVR: Onkyo TX-RZ50
- Multizone Amplifier: Rotel RMB-1506
- Power Source/Conditioner: Furman ELITE15 DM i
- SPEAKERS
- Front: KEF LS50W
- Center: MartinLogan Motion 30
- Rear: Polk 80 F/X-LS (in-ceiling)
- Subwoofer: Polk HTS-12
- Zone 1: 2x Origin Acoustics D67
- Zone 2: 2x Origin Acoustics D67
- Zone 3: 2x Origin Acoustics D65EX (outdoor)
Background:
At my previous house, with the previous setup, I had the KEF LS50W speakers connected to my Integra DRX-3.3 via the Zone 2 / Zone B (Line Out) RCA jacks, and had sound output to these speakers via Zone B. It wasn't ideal, but that AVR didn't have RCA pre-outs, so that was the only way I could get the KEF LS50W speakers to work with that setup. There was no buzz, no hum - no issues at all.
Moving to the new house, I introduced a bunch of new equipment and different configurations to muddy things up. After getting everything connected, I powered up the KEF speakers and was met with a horrible, very audible "buzz". Not a hum, but a distinct, low frequency, sawtooth-y buzz.
"Okay, so something's introducing noise. New house, something was wired up weird, or maybe one of the new pieces of equipment is causing this?"
I disconnected everything from the new AVR, and just had the KEF speakers connected to them via the RCA cables: buzz.
I moved the AVR power from the Furman power conditioner (some "power conditioner", huh?) to the another outlet on the same circuit: buzz.
I moved the KEF power to the same outlet as the AVR: buzz.
I moved both to a different circuit: buzz.
I tried different power cables, different RCA cables: buzz, buzz.
"Alright, so that means it's definitely a ground loop, right? I read a bunch about them, and they can be caused by poor grounding at your panel. The builder has cheaped out on other stuff - maybe it's a bad ground?"
Drove an 8' copper-clad ground rod as far into the ground as I could (hit bedrock at 6', so I lopped off the remainder), 8' away from existing ground rod, and connected it in series in what I believe to be an NEC-approved dual ground rod setup: buzz.
"They make products that supposedly kill ground loops, so how about I just try one of those?"
Bought this thing, hooked it up: buzz. Thought maybe I had it backwards, swapped the connection around: louder buzz.
"Well... how about I grab the old Integra AVR and hook it up the way I had it before; see if that quiets things down."
I hooked the old Integra DRX-3.3 up to the KEF LS50W speakers the way it used to be set up, plugged them both into the Furman conditioner: buzz.
Moved them both from the Furman to a different outlet on the same circuit: buzz.
Different circuit: buzz.
"What the hell?! Okay, so I keep seeing people mention cable TV boxes introducing noise. Ah, but I don't have mine hooked up yet... Suddenlink did install an Arris RFoG, though, and that's got RG6 coax that runs in the walls, so... let's look at that."
Disconnected the Arris RFoG device: buzz.
And that brings us to where I'm at today: out of ideas.
The issue clearly seems to have something to do with the KEF LS50W speakers, since the buzz is present on the Onkyo and Integra AVRs. But what the hell do I do to fix it? Short of selling the KEFs and just going for more traditional, passive speakers (which I'm honestly not at all opposed to at this point), I honestly don't know.
I'm hoping someone on here far more knowledgeable about this than me is reading this and thinking "Ah, yep, it's because [this]. You just need to do [that] and you'll stop pulling your hair out!"
Fingers crossed, and thank you all in advance!