bell notificationshomepageloginNewPostedit profiledmBox

Hoots : Humming (noise) due to guitar or amplifier so when i power on my line6 spider 30W amp without any inputs then even if I turn the master volume max there is no noise. but when i connect my guitar there is noise... but again - freshhoot.com

10% popularity   0 Reactions

humming (noise) due to guitar or amplifier
so when i power on my line6 spider 30W amp without any inputs then even if I turn the master volume max there is no noise.
but when i connect my guitar there is noise... but again if i turn my guitar volume to zero through the volume knob on my guitar itself the noise goes away....
so i am guessing the problem is with the guitar pickups right?

if i change the pickup will the noise go?
i tried changing the cables too.. noise still there..


Load Full (3)

Login to follow hoots

3 Comments

Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best

10% popularity   0 Reactions

This is almost definitely the electrical wiring in your house. I'm assuming the guitar in question isn't very high-end. The hum could be decreased by properly shielding your guitar (unless it already is). This means building a Faraday cage around the control circuitry, and connecting it to ground. If you have no idea what I'm talking about, you can google the web and learn more before attempting DIY, or get a luthier to do it for you.


10% popularity   0 Reactions

It isn't necessarily a problem with your pickups, but more likely a loose connection in the wiring of the guitar. If you are unfamiliar with electronics and soldering then a trip to a Guitar tech or Luthier is in order.

Edit: more info

You should test the amp with another guitar, or test your guitar in a different amp. If your guitar has the same type of hum in a different amp, then there is a problem with the guitar. If a different guitar in your amp has the same problem, the it is the amp.

It is possible you are hearing the hum from a single coil, un-shielded pickup configuration, which is one of the tests in the main comments is asking you to check for. If the hum changes with the guitar position in the room then it is likely a shielding problem.

There are a number of questions on the site that deal with this in more detail:

Can guitar hum possibly be due to a bad pickup

Noise while not touching guitar strings or metal parts

Electric Guitar Noise


10% popularity   0 Reactions

As the other answers said, this could also be a capacitive-coupling issue, which is not the pickups' fault but to blame on the guitar's shielding. However, it may just as well indeed be magnetic coupling, which is indeed all about the pickups. From your question, it's not possible to say which one. Here's a couple of distinguishing points:

Magnetic coupling is much more effective at low frequencies, so if it's a dull, “distant”, sinuoid humming, that's almost certainly magnetic. OTOH, a thin, “bee-like” sawing noise is more likely to come from capacitive coupling.
Magnetic coupling works predominantly for magnetic fields aligned in direction of the pickup axis. Therefore, rotating the guitar about the neck axis will usually give a periodic change in hum amplitude, at some alignment it should vanish almost completely. Whereas capacitive coupling tends to come from quadrupole- and octopule fields, for which turning the guitar merely changes the timbre of the noise, but you won't find a truely silent position.
Capacitive coupling can be shielded with any decent conductor (whereas to shield from magnetic fields you need either high-permeability iron alloys, or very good conductors like thick aluminium, which isn't practical). That includes even somewhat poor conductors such as human flesh, and for this reason you can often strongly reduce capacitive coupling by simply grounding your body whilst holding the guitar. In most guitars, this works simply by touching the strings, but you can also try touching a piece of exposed metal on a radiator or water tap. If that makes a significant difference, the hum is capacitive.
Magnetic interference comes mostly from linear, non-toroidal power transformers. Such transformers are found in most guitar amps, so magnetic hum is often worst when you're close to the amp. Most other modern electronic devices don't have such transformers anymore; other strong sources include electric motors and CRT monitors/TVs, but I reckon that's unlikely in your case.
Capacitive interference comes mostly from hard-switching semiconductor devices. The worst offenders are triac-dimmed incandescent lights; fluorescent lights are also quite bad. Less strong, but also annoying are many modern switching power supplies, LCD screens and capacitive touchpads. So if the problem is worst next to your computer, it's most likely capacitive (unless you're still using a CRT screen).

Capacitive coupling should be attacked with shielding in the guitar. Cladding the interior with tin foil (must be connected to the jack's ground) works very well in my experience.

Humbuckers are specifically designed to cancel magnetic coupling, so if the PUs are decent humbuckers then the magnetic coupling shouldn't be an issue. If it is nevertheless, the PUs are probably faulty. If you have single coils and suffer from magnetic hum, I recommend you get some SC-width humbuckers or stacked humbuckers.


Back to top Use Dark theme