Noisy Stomp Box
Moderator: Shoshanah Marohn
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Noisy Stomp Box
I use a small stomp box for adding reverb. It sounds pretty good when activated, however, if the switch is toggled to shut the reverb off, the amplified sound has a terrible hum.
Is this just the way it is with these boxes, or should the unit pass the signal thru cleanly?
Is there a way to filter out the hum?
Is this just the way it is with these boxes, or should the unit pass the signal thru cleanly?
Is there a way to filter out the hum?
- Brooks Montgomery
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- John Gould
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Pedal Nosie
Much of the time it's the power supply for the pedal isn't filtered well. Causes noise and hum
A couple of guitars
Nashville 1000 Fender Mustang III Boss Katana MKII 50
Emmons LeGrande II and Sho Bud Pro II
Nashville 1000 Fender Mustang III Boss Katana MKII 50
Emmons LeGrande II and Sho Bud Pro II
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- Posts: 33
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The setup is rather simple: guitar out to reverb box in.
Out of reverb box directly to amp.
I have tried powering the unit with a battery and have used a couple of different amps --- no change (sound is good when reverb box is switched on, bad hum when box is toggled off).
Interestingly, I can greatly reduce the hum by moving the box away from other electronic devices.
My hunch is that unit does not properly shield the signal when toggled off. Oddly though is how clean it sounds when turned on.
Thank you all for your thoughts!
Out of reverb box directly to amp.
I have tried powering the unit with a battery and have used a couple of different amps --- no change (sound is good when reverb box is switched on, bad hum when box is toggled off).
Interestingly, I can greatly reduce the hum by moving the box away from other electronic devices.
My hunch is that unit does not properly shield the signal when toggled off. Oddly though is how clean it sounds when turned on.
Thank you all for your thoughts!
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- Posts: 33
- Joined: 5 Apr 2014 10:53 am
- Location: California, USA
I currently have a Grail Nano on my board and there are no issues. But funny thing is that years ago I had an original Holy Grail -- the first model -- and it occasionally did have whine/hum issues. I recall it being a come & go problem on different pedalboards, in different pedal combinations.
Have you tried messing with the stomp switch, jiggling, pushing hard, pushing light -- seeing if the problem might be as faulty switch?
Have you tried messing with the stomp switch, jiggling, pushing hard, pushing light -- seeing if the problem might be as faulty switch?
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- Posts: 21192
- Joined: 16 Feb 1999 1:01 am
- Location: Glen Burnie, Md. U.S.A.
Not necessarily. Both the input and output impedances will change when the unit is switched (if the unit is a "true bypass" circuit). That change in loading could affect certain frequencies, which might make hum more/less noticeable.Ian Rae wrote:But if that's the problem surely it would hum all the time.
Like Georg says, more info please.
But to find out if it is just a shielding problem (some stomps have plastic cases), you can wrap the unit in foil and see if that helps the problem.
Also...have you tried different cables with the unit?