GunsMadeAmericaFree
Golden Member
For about the last 20 years, whenever I built a PC, I would install an inexpensive PC stereo speaker into a 5.25" drive bay. The speaker had a headphone wire/jack that went back through the chassis, out through the back, and plugged into the headphone out jack on the back of the PC. My wife and I love the fact that you can quickly reach up and turn a physical knob to turn volume up and down whenever needed.
A couple of years back, I noticed that there started to be a hum in the speakers on one of our 3 PC's. I assumed it was the speaker itself, and old "Thor" model that was probably 15 years old, and I ordered several replacements.
Strangely enough, the interference persisted even after:
1) completely replacing the speaker and wires, and then doing it again
2) replacing the power supply
3) We also had to replace the motherboard, and doing that didn't seem to make any difference, either. (we're using the motherboard's built in sound chip)
I'm not sure what else my options might be to isolate the generated signal hum. Since I replaced the power supply, and I replaced the actual speakers twice, I'm thinking it was not either of those. I don't need anything fancy, just stereo sound. I'm wondering if there is anything else easy I can try that might give some light on why this is happening?
We don't need anything fancy, we just want very basic sound that we can turn volume up and down easily with the built in analog potentiometer wheel for volume.
Any thoughts on where we could start? It's a very small problem, but it ANNOYS me...
A couple of years back, I noticed that there started to be a hum in the speakers on one of our 3 PC's. I assumed it was the speaker itself, and old "Thor" model that was probably 15 years old, and I ordered several replacements.
Strangely enough, the interference persisted even after:
1) completely replacing the speaker and wires, and then doing it again
2) replacing the power supply
3) We also had to replace the motherboard, and doing that didn't seem to make any difference, either. (we're using the motherboard's built in sound chip)
I'm not sure what else my options might be to isolate the generated signal hum. Since I replaced the power supply, and I replaced the actual speakers twice, I'm thinking it was not either of those. I don't need anything fancy, just stereo sound. I'm wondering if there is anything else easy I can try that might give some light on why this is happening?
We don't need anything fancy, we just want very basic sound that we can turn volume up and down easily with the built in analog potentiometer wheel for volume.
Any thoughts on where we could start? It's a very small problem, but it ANNOYS me...