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Re: [TenTec] Running a Century 21 on external 12V power

To: tentec@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [TenTec] Running a Century 21 on external 12V power
From: Jim Brown <k9yc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Reply-to: k9yc@xxxxxxxx, Discussion of Ten-Tec Equipment <tentec@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Fri, 2 Jun 2017 00:09:36 -0700
List-post: <mailto:tentec@contesting.com>
On Thu,6/1/2017 10:23 PM, Dukes HiFi wrote:
Sorry Jim, ground loops are real. That is why many high end audio components are sold with 
IEC cords that do NOT have the grounds connected. In fact, there is a version of the 
“standard” IEC three prong chassis connector that has no ground post at all.

Nope. Wrong analysis. First, that gear with no third pin is double insulated, so there's no possibility of a short between AC and exposed metal. Such equipment is identified by electrical codes as Class II equipment. "Regular" stuff is Class I. Read about it on page 17 of this tutorial that I was hired to write for pro audio and video contractors.

http://k9yc.com/SurgeXPowerGround.pdf

Second, the power line buzz we have erroneously blamed on "ground loops" is really leakage current from the AC power line to the chassis, which, by law (if it's Class I gear) MUST be connected to the green wire. AND all the chassis must be coupled together.

The best analysis I've seen of how leakage current causes buzz is by Bill Whitlock, a superb audio and RF engineer who owns Jensen Transformers. I've borrowed it for the tutorials on my website. It's part of this slide set for talks I've done for several ham conventions. http://k9yc.com/GroundingAndAudio.pdf Fact is, it's NOT a loop, and the REAL solution is bonding every chassis in the station together, and to all other grounds in the home/building. This Power Point formed the basis of most of N0AX's new ARRL book on Grounding and Bonding.

I have three Paragon Audio examples in my own living room, two rear channel 
powered surround speakers and a very nice center front channel powered speaker. 
They came from the factory that way and are NOT illegal.

Right. They're Class II products. Home audio products are built that way BECAUSE the double insulation minimizes leakage current, and BECAUSE the green wire connection can legally be eliminated.

Ground loops DO cause hum. That is the sole reason for what is known as “Star grounding” in 
sophisticated electronic components. Every competent electronic designer employs “Star 
grounding” for just the purpose of eliminating ground loops, especially in products that involve 
audio.
The purpose of "star grounding" is really proper bonding. See my tutorial. Bonding is critical for killing buzz.
I personally corrected the design of a very costly high voltage regulated 60 Hz AC power 
supply from a prominent vendor because I identified that they had depended upon a PAINTED 
hole as the electrical connection for their well-intended star ground. They forgot that paint 
is an insulator and this “AC” power supply suddenly became immensely polarity 
dependent as a result. An AC supply should NEVER be polarity dependent!
Every Astron I've opened has paint between the lug where the AC green wire is soldered and the chassis it's mounted to. :) And that same paint-insulated lug is used as the point where V- is bonded to the chassis.

A prominent high end audio equipment manufacturer, Audio Research, made the same mistake in 
their D115 vacuum tube power amplifier, only it this case, the hole they were using for 
“Star” was anodized. Different cause, same result, hum.
Yep, I see that set of mistakes a LOT. Paint as an insulator also a HUGE problem in vehicles.
This is also the reason why several companies sell a useful device (of which I own 
two) that isolates the cable company’s coax shield from electrical ground - 
these DO eliminate ground loop hum that arises from the multiple grounds that are 
involved with a massive cable system and a home audio system.

Such devices are unsafe and illegal if they interrupt the proper grounding and bonding of that CATV cable. Jensen Transformers sells a good quality RF transformer that can be placed between a properly bonded CATV (or antenna) cable and a home entertainment system. The purpose is to eliminate an uncontrolled path for AC power leakage current.

This is not theory or legal mumbo jumbo written by lawyers, this is personal 
experience with hum elimination and some very solid science.

Electrical codes (like NEC) are written by a bunch of EXCELLENT electrical engineers, and are based on solid engineering. Codes are written to take a VERY wide variety of conditions into account -- everything from lightning protection, electrical safety, to the interconnection of all sorts of low voltage systems (like home entertainment systems, telephone, CATV, alarm and security systems, etc.). Anyone who thinks they're wrong needs to learn some more engineering, or to learn more about those multiple systems types. And anyone who thinks there is a difference between theory and practice needs to learn more about one or the other.

73, Jim K9YC


With all due respect,

Gary

W0DVN


PS: I did not say eliminating the ground pin on the C21 WOULD resolve the hum, only that it 
COULD solve the problem. It seems that it did not so there must be another path to ground or 
another mechanism of 60 Hz coupling that is the offending root cause of the hum in the C21 In 
question. The fact that the gentleman was able to worsen the hum by moving his hand near some 
capacitor suggests that there is a high impedance “antenna” for 60 Hz in this 
radio, and a source of significant 60 AC energy within. I say this because operating this 
radio with the ground pin removed is the electrical equivalent of operating the radio from an 
external 12 volt DC supply ELECTRICALLY. Something else is coupling 60 Hz AC into the audio 
line of the radio. There is NO Way that he could affect power supply 120 Hz ripple by moving 
his hands around some capacitors inside the radio. He is only affecting coupling of 60 Hz 
energy into the audio line, not power supply regulation.

It is even possible that the hum coupling is magnetic, coupling from the 
magnetic transformer core, which is inside the C21 cabinet,  directly to the 
audio circuit, and thus the use of an eternal supply would most likely 
eliminate this. This was the exact reason why Counterpoint Audio chose to put 
the power transformer for their esteemed SA-3000 preamplifier in a separate 
case from the main electronics cabinet. Even though Counterpoint still sent the 
AC power from the transformer into the preamplifier cabinet to be rectified, 
filtered and regulated there, the magnetic coupling aspect of hum generation 
(by the transformer) was totally eliminated by 6 feet of separation between the 
transformer and the electronics.It may well be that the C21 audio circuit has 
so much gain (for the dual direct conversion design to work) and such high 
impedance, combined with the possibility that the transformer has so much 
magnetic leakage that this presents itself as the hum that is reported. A 
simple piece of Nickel foil between the transformer and the rest of the radio 
would fix this.

I still contend that there is no reason why operation of a C21 should require 
an external supply. I assume Ten Tec felt that the amount of coupling was 
acceptable for most users and that headphones would only be used with an 
attenuator.



On Jun 1, 2017, at 10:42 PM, Jim Brown <k9yc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

On Thu,6/1/2017 8:02 PM, Dukes HiFi wrote:
The internal supply is pretty good. If it is introducing hum of the ground loop 
type, why not just lift the ground (green wire). That should eliminate ground 
loops.
NO, NO, NO. This both illegal and unsafe. NEVER do this.

Ground loops are a myth.

73, Jim K9YC

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