On 9/23/2015 7:09 AM, Angus Kerr wrote:
> I finally started messing around with the Scarlett after upgrading my
> Linux kernel to 4.0, which gives the full mixer capability.
> After playback had ended, I was sitting and just fiddling with
> computer related stuff, and then I thought, what's that noise?
> 1: A high frequency whine at about 10k similar to that made by old
> CRT TV sets.
> 2: A low-mid 'chatty' noise that sounds like digital electronics
> working.
> Both were independent of the volume know, i.e. same at 0 and full
> crank.
> @ Mike, I see you did a nice review of this unit. Did you notice any
> problems with the unit you tested.
Those noises that you're describing sound like they're the result of
electrical noise from the computer getting onto the ground of the
Scarlett. The fact that you can't turn off the noise with the volume
control means that it's not likely that it's coming from inside the
Scarlett. The simplest thing to try first is a different USB cable
connecting the Scarlett to the computer. Sometimes a plug won't make a
good ground connection or the cable isn't well shielded. Or, since it's
not powered from the computer through the USB port, just unplug the USB
cable and see if the noise goes away.
Do you have a balanced connection between the Scarlett output and your
monitor chain? If so, you might try lifting the ground connection to see
if that has an effect. Do you hear the same noise when you listen on
headphones connected to the Scarlett's headphone jack?
When I'm tracking down a noise problem like this, I try to isolate the
suspicious unit as much as possible and still have it working.
I probably have a mic-in-to-monitor-out noise measurement in my review,
but unless I mentioned a noise problem, I didn't have one.
> Second question, if there is noise on the output D/A, how clean is
> the input A/D? will I get this on the analog lines in?
Try it and see. Connect a 150 ohm resistor between pins 2 and 3 of an
XLR plug, plug that into a mic input, turn the input gain up to a
reasonable setting and make a recording. Then play the recording and
look at the DAW meter. If everything's OK, you will see some noise with
peaks around -75 dBFS. That's not the quietest I've ever measured but
it's OK for the price.
--
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