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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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John Fields wrote:
On Fri, 04 Nov 2005 01:59:05 -0500, jh wrote: Hi, I was hoping somebody here might be able to help me with a question. First, some background. A couple of months ago I was trying to record the sounds of the insides of my computer for an experimental sound project. I first tried it with a cheap, crappy lapel mic that came with a pocket voice recorder. It worked just fine. Then I borrowed a fairly nice, high quality microphone and tried it again. Sure enough, this microphone picked up a lot more sounds... in fact, it recorded all sorts of beeps, buzzes, and hums that weren't even there, apparently some sort of electromagnetic interference. I was amused to find that this high-quality microphone was much more prone to picking up this interference than the cheap one I tried earlier. The thing is, the interference sounds were much more interesting than the real sounds. Holding the microphone near the graphics card, it recorded different noises depending on what was being displayed on screen. The fans sounded like something out of a science fiction movie. My personal favorite sound came from the power cord while the computer was asleep: it made a bizarre sequence of changing pitches that repeated every couple of seconds. The only problem is, all of these great interference-caused phantom sounds were almost drowned out by the actual normal sound produced by the fans, hard drive, etc. in the computer. Needless to say, the microphone was quite adept at recording these sounds. So my question is this: is it possible to build a device, or modify a microphone, so that it picks up ONLY the electromagnetic interference, but no actual sound? --- If your mic was picking up EMI and also acoustic sound you could probably get rid of a large amount of the acoustic sound by shielding the mic's diaphagm. That is, cover the places where the sound enters the microphone in order to keep sound out of there. Maybe cotton balls and Scotch tape? The other thing you might want to try would be to wind a coil and substitute it for the mic. I'd start with a couple of hundred turns of 24 gauge telephone wire wound on an air core just to see what would happen, and then go on from there. A telephone pickup is just the thing he is looking for. There are different kinds of interference. The electrical has both static and magnetic, which often sound very different. I say this because I use a device to look for interference very often. I can switch in the coil or or small antenna, to get a sample of both. The magnetic will penetrade metal where the static will not. I am still working on completing my little amplified snooper. I also need to switch in a photodiode to detect and listen to light noise. I also need a vibration sensor to detect "vibration". A low frequency, less than 10 HZ, audio sensor would be good to sense ventillation noise. To detect a static magenetic field, I need to rotate my coil, or get a Hall Effect sensor. greg |
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