Audio/Microphone Phantom Power Hum Question

Al Hoff

Average Stuffer
Original poster
Feb 25, 2017
80
144
Question is near the end.

Alright in short, I am using a Focusrite Solo Gen 2 USB Audio Interface. I output to some speakers and headphones and hope to have my PC capture my microphone. I own a ModMic 5. It requires a little voltage to be operational (specifications say 1-10V-ish). So I have a Behringer PS400 phantom power supply and put it into +12V mode. I run a short XLR patch cable from the Behringer to the Focusrite. I picked up a cheapo XLR to 3.5mm plug without much thought thinking it would work.

Well, it _does_ work I tried it out. But the cheapo plug is creating a hum. With or without the microphone plugged in. I don't really know much behind the scenes here with audio equipment. But I do know a reviewer said the cheapo plug had been soldered together on two of the pins. So. What I want to know is why is this plug the problem. Is it because it is unbalanced? Would a balanced solution fix this? Assuming that is the problem..
 

Al Hoff

Average Stuffer
Original poster
Feb 25, 2017
80
144
Why are you powering it off phantom12 if thats outside of it's rated range?

Can you link to the adapter?
I wanted an elegant solution to power the microphone. And the company that sells the microphone had a post about using 12V phantom power and said it should work fine.

And I couldnt find the product on their website but they have it on their amazon store http://a.co/dg7dlKl
 

Wolf_LikeMe

Caliper Novice
Mar 23, 2017
29
16
Ah right, thanks, I was just wondering about that.

http://www.plugwiring.co.uk/how-to-wire-an-xlr-cannon-audio-plug/
This gives a decent diagram as to how the connections are made.

http://www.aviom.com/blog/balanced-vs-unbalanced/ - Jump to the section "Balanced Cables and Systems"
This is a good explanation.

In it's most basic terms its utilising the superposition of waves to eliminate noise.
TL;DR
  • Balanced consists of 2 Signal channels and GND
  • One signal is flipped/inverted at the start. +S1 (Positive Signal 1) -S2 (Negative Signal 2)
  • Noise is introduced to both channels, think of (past the shielding (unbalanced relies on just shielding) At this point +S1+N, -S2+N (N=Noise)
  • The audio equipment that utilises this then flips Signal2 and superpositions them to give you: (+S1+N)-(-S2+N) = +S1+N+S2-N = +S1+S2
  • (Note S1 and S2 are the same I just need to differentiate between them.)
  • In an unbalanced system you would just get S+N, a high impedance would somewhat negate the noise.

Shout if that doesn't make sense, I struggle slightly to explain it without drawing things, and thanks again for letting me know that the ModMic can run on 12V, should prove useful in the future.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Al Hoff

Al Hoff

Average Stuffer
Original poster
Feb 25, 2017
80
144
Turns out the behringer ps400 is what is making the humming when in 12V mode. Should have tested that.........