Interesting that all this old stuff worked fine when it was installed on my computer and their desks over the years. But put some of it together here, and it wants to be problematic.
I really wanted to utilize my old 12v@5amp Surveillance DVR/Cam Power-Supply so I could split the 3.5mm plug to run my
- BuyStuffArcades HDMI/LVDS AtGames Backbox 15-in LCD Controller
- My Dell SoundBar (with internal) amp that I just installed
This AC-Adapter works better with the 120v input grounded as designed.
That set off this whole cascade of events and the ground-loop hum came back.
TL;DR I got it all working.
Even with the Volume turned-up, my Windows Desktop is now very quiet of background noise or hum (good Noise-Floor). When I start Pinball-Y (as it seizes the 7.1 audio-channels) it gets virtually silent (like perfect). I don't run videos in Pinball-Y (just still-pics of my Tables with no music) so only sound in Selector Wheel is if you press a flipper -button, you get a low-beep.
On this gutted ALP, there is very little access inside the cabinet. I think that is why you often see us owners only install inside what we must (using small areas we can easily get to in the back. Most other stuff goes outside the cabinet.
First thing I did was disconnect everything, I removed the old used power-strip (one I grabbed from my closet years ago) and installed a new (good) Tripplite Power-Strip with surge/grounding-light on the back panel of the ALP.
I'm still using my newish APC-1350-UPS. The Computer is plugged into the APC directly so it never gets accidentally turned-off of Shut-Down improperly.
Then, I more carefully routed the wires in groups
- AC Power
- HDMI, USB, SUB-Power, and any DC-voltage lines
- Line-level analog audio lines
- High-power or "amped" speaker wires between amps and speakers themselves
The old 19v laptop AC-Adapter for the two ZK-TB21 had to stay un-grounded to prevent (this other major type of) whirling-distortion ground-loop noise. These amps are much more versatile with 19-volts verses just 12v. Maybe I can get some better speakers later.
The BuyStuffArcades HDMI/LVDS AtGames Backbox 15-in LCD Controller looks cool mounted on stand-offs inside the Backbox, but I think it really should be in a (shielded) metal case/box to prevent EMI spilling everywhere.
Two of my speaker systems have internal Amps, so some long-ish runs outside the cabinet (that need to isolated properly).
I installed 2 ferrite cores in key places but none of those "inline filters" I've seen guys use.
One other tip to make sure you are not fixing a irrelevant problem. I noticed that when my computer if OFF, the Realtek-7.1 audio jacks are left "floating". This causes internally amplified speaker-sets to hum when their on-board volume-controls are turned up (how I usually keep them) ... until you boot-up the computer. Un-plugging the 3.5mm jack from the back of the PC also silences the hum.
It all helped a little, but not as much as you would think. There was not "one thing" that fixed it all.
Edited by Tesla, 19 September 2025 - 01:04 AM.