Grounding question?


Hi to all...

I hope I can get help with my problem... I bought a co-op here in NY which is in a old building. My video is horrible and I don't know what to do. There is an interference on both my televisions that is just driving me crazy...

The interference looks like lines running across the tv,at times it looks like the whites are bleeding....

I've bought pc audio outlets getting rid of the 15 cent outlets that came with the apartment. Still nothing, I've even went as far as bought a Richard Gray substation for the bedroom and a pole pig for the living room and still nothing.

I've upgraded all of the powercords and still nothing...

I've spoke with an electrician and he said that maybe the grounding wire being used is cheap or the wrong kind of wire.. What? Can that be the problem?

He also mentioned that it may be interference from another outlet that isn't connected properly such as a light switch...

Can anyone help? Thanks for any information..
soundsvision

Showing 8 responses by hifihvn

it could even someone else's router for their cable TV internet leaking through the building, and drop amp. Some people stream stuff all day.

Where I put router, it should say cable internet modem.
There could be a sump pump, a fire escape light, or something else always running. Shutting one circuit (breaker/fuse) off at a time may help. Then if it stops, see what is on there.

I guess at $4K a day, maybe I should have become an electrician there.
Also, if your running Cable TV, try the set with an antenna (if close to the city). If the noise doesn't happen when on the antenna, there could be a poor connection in the cable, or the AC electrical ground and neutral bonding.

If there is actually a bad AC power ground/neutral connection, your place can be grounding through the cable TV wire. This can be dangerous too.

A boiler, furnace, can cause interference.

If a light switch is turned on, and doing nothing, why can't you turn it off?

Check the real estate laws. A lot of states have disclosure laws. If there was a known problem, the previous owner may be responsible.

Maybe an electrician will post with ideas.
I forgot, if disconnecting it from cable helps, try a ground loop idolater. Some people may have better brands to try. This won't solve a problem if you have faulty wiring, just a ground loop problem. Link [http://www.markertek.com/Video-Equipment/Video-Processors/Video-Noise-Hum-Elimination/Jensen-Transformers/VRD-1FF.xhtml]
You don't mention whether you have cable TV. If you do, they may find the problem. Also, if it's a single drop for the building, it could even someone else's router for their cable TV internet leaking through the building, and drop amp. Some people stream stuff all day. This would show up more with analog cable. Digital cable may not have this problem. TOO many unknowns.

There are no dimmers in the house but there are some light switches that are lighted. Meaning the switch itself lights on when the light itself is off.

If these are the ones that glow amber/orange to find it in the dark, I've never seen one of these type of switch give a problem. While on, they can become defective just like any other switch. But not normally a problem when in off position, and just glowing.
I guess anything is possible. I never lived by one. Your neighbors should have the same problem on some of their TVs too, I would think.