Rockbox Technical Forums

Support and General Use => Recording => Topic started by: davehouse on March 03, 2009, 02:44:59 AM

Title: Buzz / Hum recording on H120 - plug in power issue?
Post by: davehouse on March 03, 2009, 02:44:59 AM
Hi,

I recently aquired a new 2nd hand H120 having fried my other one (doh!) I rockboxed the new one and am using the build offered in the last page of this thread: http://forums.rockbox.org/index.php?topic=2513.0

Now, something strange is happening to my recordings that wasn't happening before. I am getting a short, intermittent, bassy buzz/hum ranging from about .5 seconds to 3 seconds that shows up on the peakmeter, through headphones when monitoring and in the recording itself. It is only apparent at high gain but most of my recordings require a high gain so decreasing gain isnt an option.

I've done some experimenting with various mics and realised something strange. If I use my Sony ECM-DS70P, no buzz. If I use my Soundman OKM Binaural mics with their little amp, buzz. If I use the OKMs without the amp, plugged directly into Line In, no buzz. If I monitor the recording screen with no mic at all but Source set to Line In, buzz. This is the case for every combination of recording settings - format, bit rate, clipping light on/off, etc etc. And using the iRiver firmware - no buzz under any circumstances as far as I can tell.

This led me to believe that perhaps there's an issue with the plug in power supply? The Sony and the amp-less OKMs draw on the H120's plug in power and I get no buzz. As far as I know, the OKM amp 'bypasses' the plug in power supply and provides its own voltage, and this way I get the buzz. And if there's no mic at all I get the buzz, too. So it seems like if the plug in power supply isn't 'going anywhere' then the buzz is present, but if a mic makes use of it, all is good.

Any ideas what might be causing it? Like I say I had no such issues with my old H120. I'd assume it was a hardware issue but the fact that the iRiver firmware works fine suggests otherwise.

Many thanks,

Dave

Title: Re: Buzz / Hum recording on H120 - plug in power issue?
Post by: AlexP on March 03, 2009, 03:48:31 AM
Firstly, that build is both well out of date, and a custom build.  Before asking for support we ask you to test with a clean, current build.  Please do so.  As for plug power supply - I believe the only difference between line in and mic in is that one of them (mic) supplies the power.  If you are using a self-powered mic, then line in might be better.

So, current build please, and try that out.
Title: Re: Buzz / Hum recording on H120 - plug in power issue?
Post by: davehouse on March 03, 2009, 11:46:36 PM
Hi, thanks for the reply.

I tried the current H120 build and the buzz seems to have dissapeared. I am currently only able to test with no mic plugged in, monitoring the line in source. Before, however, this produced the buzzing. I am getting a high pitched ring now, though.

I've uploaded 2 examples below. Both are recordings of line in with no mic input but are representitive of the issue explained above.

http://www.carbonbaseddesign.co.uk/abc/R_LINE_0001.wav - Using current build, high pitched ringing

http://www.carbonbaseddesign.co.uk/abc/rec_0001.mp3 - Using REP build above, buzz and high pitched ringing

Re. using Line In or Mic source, the only option I have is Line In other than build in mic...

Title: Re: Buzz / Hum recording on H120 - plug in power issue?
Post by: dreamlayers on March 04, 2009, 01:47:12 AM
This is analog noise.  It's extremely unlikely that Rockbox is corrupting digital data in this way.

The electrical noise is probably coming from variations in power usage by other parts of the H120, such as hard drive activity or PWM backlight fading.  Check if the noises are correlated with these things.
Title: Re: Buzz / Hum recording on H120 - plug in power issue?
Post by: petur on March 04, 2009, 04:22:01 AM
could it not also be from a bad ground connection somewhere (jack, cable,...) ? I admit I haven't yet listed to the soundfile (I'm at work atm)
Title: Re: Buzz / Hum recording on H120 - plug in power issue?
Post by: dreamlayers on March 04, 2009, 02:02:00 PM
could it not also be from a bad ground connection somewhere (jack, cable,...) ? I admit I haven't yet listed to the soundfile (I'm at work atm)
If I just looked at the sound file I would suspect that.  However, the following part of the first message seems to say that the buzz happens if nothing is plugged in:
If I monitor the recording screen with no mic at all but Source set to Line In, buzz.
Title: Re: Buzz / Hum recording on H120 - plug in power issue?
Post by: davehouse on March 04, 2009, 11:05:34 PM
yes, the buzz happens if nothing is plugged in. The above recordings were made with no mic plugged in, infact. This is why I thought it might be a plug in power issue as when that power is being 'used' (forgive my lack of technical knowledge) the buzz goes away.

What is strange is that my old H120 had no such issue with any build - the old REP ones or the latest releases. And the new H120 seems fine with iRiver firmware, and even somewhat better using the latest build of Rockbox (although the ringing is still present on recordings).
Title: Re: Buzz / Hum recording on H120 - plug in power issue?
Post by: petur on March 05, 2009, 03:45:22 AM
If the issue is gone in the iriver firmware, it can't be the plug power. That plug power is always there, it can't be switched off...
Title: Re: Buzz / Hum recording on H120 - plug in power issue?
Post by: davehouse on March 10, 2009, 12:55:44 AM
dreamlayers was right - it was the backlight fading out causing the buzz! Thanks so much! There's still a tiny 'bump' when the light comes on but its bearable. The ring is still present though, can't seem to get rid of that and think its down to HD activity.

The most annoying thing is my old H120 was silent as a mouse. Even the remote didn't click. How can different units differ so?
Title: Re: Buzz / Hum recording on H120 - plug in power issue?
Post by: dreamlayers on March 10, 2009, 01:25:29 AM
This may be a hardware problem.  For example, maybe some electrolytic capacitor degraded or failed.