Gareth Magennis
2012-01-02 23:38:26 UTC
Hi,
just done a gig where there was an unusual problem with a guitar.
There seemed to be some kind of signal picked up by the (single coil)
pickups, (FX board but no backline amp), which, when put through the PA or
monitors, actually fed back uncontrollably into a continuous tone. It
sounded like some kind of radio transmission, or mobile phone, but it was a
continuous fixed signal.
I've heard something similar before in a building that had a hearing aid
loop fitted and active, so asked the venue manager if he knew of any
transmitting devices in the building. He informed me that they had had this
problem before, and it was the high voltage power lines on the railway above
the venue that was the culprit. (The venue is in the arches beneath the
approach to London Bridge Station).
This got me thinking - the base frequency seemed to be around the "E" above
middle C, (330Hz) with loads of harmonics - no chance of filtering it out,
even though I gave it a go. Probably close to a square wave or a digital
datastream at that frequency.
High voltage lines I presume are DC, so I would guess this would have to be
coming from signals.
But why would signals be powered so high as to cause this kind of (almost
impossible to play) interference?
A bit of Googling shows that some types of train detection circuits use AC
in the audio range
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Track_circuit
but why would it need to be so large as to cause this amount of
interference?
Or is this actually a radio communications thing instead?
Cheers,
Gareth.
just done a gig where there was an unusual problem with a guitar.
There seemed to be some kind of signal picked up by the (single coil)
pickups, (FX board but no backline amp), which, when put through the PA or
monitors, actually fed back uncontrollably into a continuous tone. It
sounded like some kind of radio transmission, or mobile phone, but it was a
continuous fixed signal.
I've heard something similar before in a building that had a hearing aid
loop fitted and active, so asked the venue manager if he knew of any
transmitting devices in the building. He informed me that they had had this
problem before, and it was the high voltage power lines on the railway above
the venue that was the culprit. (The venue is in the arches beneath the
approach to London Bridge Station).
This got me thinking - the base frequency seemed to be around the "E" above
middle C, (330Hz) with loads of harmonics - no chance of filtering it out,
even though I gave it a go. Probably close to a square wave or a digital
datastream at that frequency.
High voltage lines I presume are DC, so I would guess this would have to be
coming from signals.
But why would signals be powered so high as to cause this kind of (almost
impossible to play) interference?
A bit of Googling shows that some types of train detection circuits use AC
in the audio range
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Track_circuit
but why would it need to be so large as to cause this amount of
interference?
Or is this actually a radio communications thing instead?
Cheers,
Gareth.