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Re: Repeater noise



Hi all,

talking about Repeater noise, did anyone figure that the Repeater produces
audible clicks when getting sounds from CFC cards? Mine does so and itīs
quite obvious that it literally "chops" the sound data into pieces, the
"click" frequency being dependent on the BPM setting. It doesnīt happen 
when
I load something from a card into the onboard memory. It canīt be the card
as itīs one the recommended ones, and even the one the Repeater originally
came with produces these glitches. Apart from that I find it quite decent,
not as noisy as my Jam Man but still not totally noise-free. It has a
unusual digital hiss to it which I find a bit disturbing.

Anyone know a cure for that nasty CFC "glitching" noise? And where can I 
get
this mod from? What does it cost? Is it available through anyone here in
Germany?

Stephen


----- Original Message -----
From: "Greg House" <ghunicycle@yahoo.com>
To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com>
Sent: Tuesday, January 07, 2003 6:20 PM
Subject: Repeater noise


> --- Mark <sine@zerocrossing.net> wrote:
> > You know, I've never really heard the "noise" everyone talked of 
>(except
> > for the headphone nose which I don't use anyway) but upon putting the
> > Repeater in the effects loop of a Johnson JT-60 guitar amp and turned 
>it
> > up and "woop, there it is."  On the bright side, I don't really ever
> > play that loud.  If I was doing a lot of gigs using it, I'd probably go
> > for the mod.
>
> I hadn't really noticed it much, using it in my studio at home, but when 
>I
used
> it in a notably RF unfriendly environment recently, I noticed a lot of
noise from
> my, normally quiet, rig. Part of that may have been a ground loop with 
>the
PA,
> but all my stuff was plugged into the same outlet, and when I bypassed 
>the
rack
> to use just the DG Stomp, it was more quiet, so I'm wondering how much of
the
> noise was from the ground loop. Unfortunately, I didn't have an isolation
> interface to test it with. Perhaps I can do that another time.
>
> So, with the shielding issues, it may be more effective on induced noise
from the
> environment that the unit's being used in then the inherent (internal)
noise of
> the thing itself.
>
> Greg
>
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