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Below is a diagram showing how a typical ground loop is made and why it is important 
to pay attention to the wiring scheme in a studio. The input shield ground lift jumpers in 
Dangerous Music equipment, and that of many other manufacturers, can help in avoiding 
ground loops and the associated poor noise performance. 
 
 

 

 
 
If the audio cables between the racks connect the equipment grounds together via the 
shields and the racks are at even slightly different potentials (on different circuits with 
different loads, long distance, etc) the shields will try to equalize the potential difference. 
 

Juice will flow down the shields and broadcast hum into the signal wires they 

were supposed to protect or wind up imposed on the reference ground of the receiving 
equipment. This situation manifests itself as the all too familiar buzz of a ‘ground loop’. 
The intensity depends on many variables but can go from unnoticeable to raging. Some 
people in desperation resort to using AC plug “ground lifts” to defeat the mains safety 
grounds in a random fashion until the system quiets down a bit. This in our view (and the 
view of the safety standards organizations) is an unacceptable method of taming ground 
buzzes. The simpler way is to make sure that all the gear has a good mains ground and to 
lift the shields on the receiving ends of the audio cables. The principals at Dangerous 
Music have wired up large, world class facilities using this scheme and have brought 
room after room online with 

no buzz problems 

from the moment of power up. This is 

why many gear manufacturers have shield lift jumpers inside their equipment. If a noise 
problem crops up, changing the jumper position will almost always cure the problem. 
Planning out the wiring system to minimize the formation of ground loops solves 
problems before they happen. 
 

Many powered speakers seem to get their audio reference ground from the input 

cable. This means that these shields should not be lifted at the XLR. One favored 
technique for trouble shooting buzz issues is to make a short XLR cable with the shield 
lifted on the Male connector and use this to test whether or not an interface warrants a 
shield lift wiring permanently into its receiving end connector. 
 

 
 

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Summary of Contents for 2Bus LT

Page 1: ...been made possible by careful design construction and top shelf component choices by recording industry veterans This manual will assist the user in the installation of the 2Bus LT and calibration of...

Page 2: ...evel signals Separation of high level and low level equipment can pre empt trouble caused by heat and EMI 4 Care should be taken to avoid liquid spills around equipment If a spill occurs please shut o...

Page 3: ...et the needs of today s recording engineers producers and artists Hook up The 2Bus LT is designed to mix the outputs of two eight channel D A converters to a stereo recorder 16x2 The 2Bus LT is easily...

Page 4: ...unce the result to a new pair of tracks but by using 4 pairs of outputs audio flexibility can be improved by assigning the drums to DAW outputs 1 and 2 the bass and vocal to 3 and 4 the guitars to 5 a...

Page 5: ...ems have converged upon depending on whether the situation is for recording or mastering The difference between the two worlds is whether the maximum electrical stress is imposed by amplitude limiting...

Page 6: ...maximum analog signal level of 18dBu The reason for this is because mastered signals tend to be compressed and bright There is a lot of rapid change slew rate in the signal that overloads processing...

Page 7: ...oard where the input wires connect These tactics rarely need to be performed but if they do please work on a well lighted table or workbench We always clean off enough space to have plenty of room so...

Page 8: ...jitter or clock troubles in digital interfaces can be traced to poor planning and implementation of the studio s grounding situation It is illuminating to realize that the engineers of yore in the re...

Page 9: ...afety grounds in a random fashion until the system quiets down a bit This in our view and the view of the safety standards organizations is an unacceptable method of taming ground buzzes The simpler w...

Page 10: ...ow 16 7 shield 4 6 high 17 6 low 5 6 shield 18 5 high 6 5 low 19 5 shield 7 4 high 20 4 low 8 4 shield 21 3 high 9 3 low 22 3 shield 10 2 high 23 2 low 11 2 shield 24 1 high 12 1 low 25 1 shield 13 no...

Page 11: ...er consumption 25 watts Warranty Free 2 year extended warranty with online registration Standard warranty 90 days parts and labor subject to inspection Does not include damage incurred through abusive...

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