Gwailo
B.A. Economics (Hon)
Hi,
You might be able to help, don't get scared away by the music equipment
I've got the following recording setup:
- Bass guitar
- Boss GT-6B (effects processor with analogue outputs)
- Bass Amp (Kustom 10W)
- Griffin iMic (Analogue-USB converter)
- Studio headphones
* Bass guitar inputs to GT-6B
* GT-6B outputs (analogue) to a) iMic (mono out), b) amp (head phone jack) and my headphones are connected to the amp.
Ok, now I noticed that when the Griffin iMic is connected to the computer and connected to the GT-6B I get a buzz through the system, which disappears when I unplug the iMic converter. I hear the buzz in the headphones connected to the amp.
My question: is there a way to filter USB connections, or, alternatively, filter the analogue side? I suppose I could build a band-pass supression filter, but I'd like an easier solution if I can find one.
I have a feeling what's happening is that the USB bus power is inducing current into the analogue side of the connection (i.e., the mic-in). Now, I can see how Griffin may have overlooked this since most microphones are passive and nobody would ever know (you'd never be able to hear the induced buzz on a dynamic microphone membrane, no matter how quiet
)
PS I don't know if the powerline ground for all my equipment is properly wired (i.e., if it's actually grounded). Hey, I suppose it could be a buzz over the ground wire through all my equipment, but then, wouldn't I get buzzed even if the iMic isn't connected?
Any help is great, thanks in advance!
You might be able to help, don't get scared away by the music equipment

I've got the following recording setup:
- Bass guitar
- Boss GT-6B (effects processor with analogue outputs)
- Bass Amp (Kustom 10W)
- Griffin iMic (Analogue-USB converter)
- Studio headphones
* Bass guitar inputs to GT-6B
* GT-6B outputs (analogue) to a) iMic (mono out), b) amp (head phone jack) and my headphones are connected to the amp.
Ok, now I noticed that when the Griffin iMic is connected to the computer and connected to the GT-6B I get a buzz through the system, which disappears when I unplug the iMic converter. I hear the buzz in the headphones connected to the amp.
My question: is there a way to filter USB connections, or, alternatively, filter the analogue side? I suppose I could build a band-pass supression filter, but I'd like an easier solution if I can find one.
I have a feeling what's happening is that the USB bus power is inducing current into the analogue side of the connection (i.e., the mic-in). Now, I can see how Griffin may have overlooked this since most microphones are passive and nobody would ever know (you'd never be able to hear the induced buzz on a dynamic microphone membrane, no matter how quiet

PS I don't know if the powerline ground for all my equipment is properly wired (i.e., if it's actually grounded). Hey, I suppose it could be a buzz over the ground wire through all my equipment, but then, wouldn't I get buzzed even if the iMic isn't connected?
Any help is great, thanks in advance!
