Poor Grounding Question - Stainless Steel
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Poor Grounding Question - Stainless Steel
I just put together a lap steel and I've got some grounding hum. It's basically the same design as 4 others I've done but this time I grounded it via the bridge screws rather than the string anchor and I'm wondering if the stainless steel saddle and screws are causing my problem. The connection is solid and solder joints fine etc.
Thoughts?
Thoughts?
- Greg Robinson
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Re: Poor Grounding Question - Stainless Steel
So Mike, does the buzz go away when you touch the strings, just doesn't damp the hum as much as on your other lap steels? Or does string contact not have any effect?
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- Mark Swanson
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Re: Poor Grounding Question - Stainless Steel
Do you have a voltmeter? If you have a meter you can test the ground connections that way and make sure that everything is getting the ground that you need and if so then that isn't the problem.
- Mark Swanson, guitarist, MIMForum Staff
- Paul Doubek
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Re: Poor Grounding Question - Stainless Steel
I don't know if the stainless is causing your grounding problem... as Mark suggested... a volt/ohm meter can help you determine that. Stainless steel is about at the opposite end of the spectrum from copper and silver with regards to conductivity. I'd post a link to a chart that shows the difference, but it's academic and I'm not sure where we're going with links. Search on "Properties table of Stainless steel, Metals and other Conductive materials" or something along those lines if you want to see the difference... but it's considerable.
Paul
Paul
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Re: Poor Grounding Question - Stainless Steel
Yes the hum goes away when I touch the bridge, strings, pickup or output jack.
As for as the conductivity of SS, I checked that out right before I posted thinking that it might be my problem. Didn't realize it was so poor but I guess that explains the lack of ad copy about expensive stainless guitar cables. <g>
I'll make a jumper wire and see if I can get rid of it by going to the string ground and also check with the volt meter. If that works I'll run one internally.
As for as the conductivity of SS, I checked that out right before I posted thinking that it might be my problem. Didn't realize it was so poor but I guess that explains the lack of ad copy about expensive stainless guitar cables. <g>
I'll make a jumper wire and see if I can get rid of it by going to the string ground and also check with the volt meter. If that works I'll run one internally.
- David Schwab
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Re: Poor Grounding Question - Stainless Steel
If the hum goes away when you touch the strings, then the bridge is grounded. The hum is coming from somewhere else. Lack of shielding is usually the culprit.
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Re: Poor Grounding Question - Stainless Steel
Just sent it out today. The grounding was fine, just a lot of hum from that huge horseshoe magnet, single coil, a cheap amp (Valve Jr) and lots of flo lights in the shop. When checking the ground with a jumper it made no difference but trying it with my Ampeg Jet the overall amount of him was far less.
Thanks all.
Thanks all.
- David Schwab
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Re: Poor Grounding Question - Stainless Steel
Were the metal parts (magnet, etc.) on the pickup grounded?
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Re: Poor Grounding Question - Stainless Steel
It comes with two wires, one of which was grounded to the base and the magnet is bolted to the base so that all should have been good.
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Re: Poor Grounding Question - Stainless Steel
The relative conductivity of stainless steel would have no effect anyway as effective shielding can be accomplished at much higher resistance^2. The carbon conductive paint has a resistance many times that of stainless and it works just fine.
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Re: Poor Grounding Question - Stainless Steel
Any type of metal, even the worst or least conductive ones will be the cause of this problem, as long as there is a posistive connection to that metal. Various grounding schemes often deliberately uses series resistance in the circuit.
Varistors, or voltage dependant resistors, are also used in safety grounding setups, where a voltage above the varistors knee or treshold will conduct overvoltage to ground.
Hum fighting is a tricky beast.... and numerous books have been written on the subject of grounding and shielding in instrumentation systems.
Varistors, or voltage dependant resistors, are also used in safety grounding setups, where a voltage above the varistors knee or treshold will conduct overvoltage to ground.
Hum fighting is a tricky beast.... and numerous books have been written on the subject of grounding and shielding in instrumentation systems.
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Re: Poor Grounding Question - Stainless Steel
Beware the temp controlled soldering iron that remains plugged in when testing for hum...
There are also a bunch of other things that can cause you to go on a wild goose chase such as an old output jack, a bad cable, and a defective plug strip. When the guitar really and truely seems to be wired correctly and you have a problem, its not a bad idea to just take the guitar over to a friend's house and plug in.
There are also a bunch of other things that can cause you to go on a wild goose chase such as an old output jack, a bad cable, and a defective plug strip. When the guitar really and truely seems to be wired correctly and you have a problem, its not a bad idea to just take the guitar over to a friend's house and plug in.