Microphonic wire?
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- johnnyreece
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- Joined: Thu Jan 26, 2012 2:05 am
- Location: New Castle, IN
Microphonic wire?
Hey, all! I ran into something interesting on a build I'd done a while back. The guy who bought it said he was running into some intermittent noise issues, which I have not been able to duplicate. However, I found something interesting: All of my preamp grid wires seemed to be microphonic. Specifically, when I ran a chopstick up and down it, I got a static-like crackling sound. It's the Weber Teflon wire. I've never had issues before, but I've not really paid this much attention to that specific kind of thing. I went ahead and put some weather stripping in certain places to keep the wire from bouncing around. Anyone else ever have this kind of issue?
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Stevem
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Re: Microphonic wire?
Yup, 100% normal for the first gain stage!
Hook up a big 1" diameter flat Ciramic cap across it instead of a input Jack and you can talk right into it like a old time crystal Mic!
Hook up a big 1" diameter flat Ciramic cap across it instead of a input Jack and you can talk right into it like a old time crystal Mic!
When I die, I want to go like my Grandfather did, peacefully in his sleep.
Not screaming like the passengers in his car!
Cutting out a man's tongue does not mean he’s a liar, but it does show that you fear the truth he might speak about you!
Not screaming like the passengers in his car!
Cutting out a man's tongue does not mean he’s a liar, but it does show that you fear the truth he might speak about you!
Re: Microphonic wire?
There's some talk that PVC is less microphonic, in as much as the thicker softer jacket dampens a bit vs hard thin teflon when right against the chassis. A bit like using silicon tube rings. Maybe this was why KF preferred PVC? I buy it, I've noticed chopsticking teflon makes more noise at least at the input. I would use PVC happily but it's no good for imperfect builders/tweakers. Looks like hell after a few goofs/mods melts it all up.
- johnnyreece
- Posts: 1072
- Joined: Thu Jan 26, 2012 2:05 am
- Location: New Castle, IN
Re: Microphonic wire?
I somewhat expected it on the first gain stage, but all three grid wires were microphonic on the first two tubes...Maybe I'll try a different brand. It'll give me an excuse to see what goodies I can pick up from Steve at Apex Jr.
Any thoughts on whether stranded would be better/worse? I like using solid core, because it stays where I put it.
Any thoughts on whether stranded would be better/worse? I like using solid core, because it stays where I put it.
- Leo_Gnardo
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Re: Microphonic wire?
Stevem wrote:Hook up a big 1" diameter flat Ciramic cap across it instead of a input Jack and you can talk right into it like a old time crystal Mic!
Yes I've found on rare occasion a length of wire that's either microphonic itself, or acts as a spring and sets off midrange ringing effects in a tube it's attached to. I can pluck the wire and hear "doink doink doink" noises like Tweetybird picking hairs off of Sylvester's nose. (A sound effect that was probably done by Fender's Freddy Tavares.) Swapping in a floppier piece of wire, stranded with plastic not Teflon insulation fixes the problem.
down technical blind alleys . . .
- martin manning
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Re: Microphonic wire?
This may be where the "different wire sounds different" hoodoo comes from.
Re: Microphonic wire?
Get the best of both worlds. Stranded, pre- tinned Belden.
I think it's Belden J TEW. Stays put & has a 105 Celsius rated coating.
I think it's Belden J TEW. Stays put & has a 105 Celsius rated coating.
Why Aye Man
Re: Microphonic wire?
I had a short microphonic wire in the reverb circuit of my SFDR. It would cause feedback and noise.
If it says "Vintage" on it, -it isn't.
- johnnyreece
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- Joined: Thu Jan 26, 2012 2:05 am
- Location: New Castle, IN
Re: Microphonic wire?
Yes, this is one of the noises I could get it to make! I think I may give this a shot.Leo_Gnardo wrote: I can pluck the wire and hear "doink doink doink" noises like Tweetybird picking hairs off of Sylvester's nose. (A sound effect that was probably done by Fender's Freddy Tavares.) Swapping in a floppier piece of wire, stranded with plastic not Teflon insulation fixes the problem.
Re: Microphonic wire?
In the past I have used silicone, zip ties and other anchor points to minimize microphonics in the preamp.
When I got back into tube amps a few years back, the first thing I heard was using a chopstick or other similar item to troubleshoot an amp.
I would tap, poke and move things around in the preamp.
Well I thought it was all screwed up because just about anywhere I tapped made a noise through the speaker!
So yeah, it's pretty normal for the preamp to do that.
When I got back into tube amps a few years back, the first thing I heard was using a chopstick or other similar item to troubleshoot an amp.
I would tap, poke and move things around in the preamp.
Well I thought it was all screwed up because just about anywhere I tapped made a noise through the speaker!
So yeah, it's pretty normal for the preamp to do that.
Tom
Don't let that smoke out!
Don't let that smoke out!
Re: Microphonic wire?
Well I thought it was all screwed up because just about anywhere I tapped made a noise through the speaker!
I'll tap the chassis an inch from the wire then the wire to see if there's a difference, and teflon is definitely worse than pvc. Cloth might be good, I never tapped around the wires in old Fenders. The modern stuff is cloth around pvc so it might be very good here.
I've done goofy things like running the wire through tiny rubber grommets as standoffs, touch of silicon to hold the grommet to the chassis. I've even put large grommets around coupling caps as damping, with ptp a cap floating across a long distance is pretty boingy (though I never heard it through the speaker). In the end I always pulled the kluges, looked too desperate. This stuff never bothered Fender or Marshall, much less Silvertone, Valco, Thomas Vox, so I'm not going to bother much either.
- johnnyreece
- Posts: 1072
- Joined: Thu Jan 26, 2012 2:05 am
- Location: New Castle, IN
Re: Microphonic wire?
Thanks again for all the feedback. I've previously been aware of tapping certain areas/wires that would make sounds in the speaker, but this was the first time I was able to pick anything up by just rubbing the wire with a chopstick (which induced a weird static-like noise). I resoldered the joints and everything, to no avail. I'm not saying I'll never use this stuff again, but I'm definitely open to experimenting with other sources/types to see if I can minimize the noise.
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vibratoking
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Re: Microphonic wire?
This sounds something like the pick guard static problem that is pretty well known. Could be that Teflon jacket is storing charge on it.johnnyreece wrote:...this was the first time I was able to pick anything up by just rubbing the wire with a chopstick (which induced a weird static-like noise).
Electronic equipment is designed using facts and mathematics, not opinion and dogma.