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BSS Prosys 8810
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<blockquote data-quote="Craig Hauber" data-source="post: 117164" data-attributes="member: 272"><p>Re: BSS Prosys 8810</p><p></p><p>I had a situation once where the 70V output of the amplifier was being picked-up by the line-input wiring between the music source and the dsp (a ZonePro) and causing something similar to what you're describing.</p><p> </p><p>A long RCA unbalanced run was zip-tied to a bundle of speaker wire a long ways through an attic. Whether the crosstalk was the actual problem or not, it went away after separating the lines and running balanced (using a Henry Eng. Matchbox). </p><p></p><p>You might try disconnecting the music input from the DSP and cranking it up and see if the problem is still there. Then try running with an iPod/phone/player of your own patched into the DSP directly with a known-good cable.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Craig Hauber, post: 117164, member: 272"] Re: BSS Prosys 8810 I had a situation once where the 70V output of the amplifier was being picked-up by the line-input wiring between the music source and the dsp (a ZonePro) and causing something similar to what you're describing. A long RCA unbalanced run was zip-tied to a bundle of speaker wire a long ways through an attic. Whether the crosstalk was the actual problem or not, it went away after separating the lines and running balanced (using a Henry Eng. Matchbox). You might try disconnecting the music input from the DSP and cranking it up and see if the problem is still there. Then try running with an iPod/phone/player of your own patched into the DSP directly with a known-good cable. [/QUOTE]
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