qreative wrote:I play a Nord 5 and guitar in a band and I have no issues with noise. I always make sure that my guitar amp and pedals are in the same outlet as the Nord.
What kind of guitar are you playing?
qreative wrote:I play a Nord 5 and guitar in a band and I have no issues with noise. I always make sure that my guitar amp and pedals are in the same outlet as the Nord.
Al_DeKlein wrote:I play an early 80's E series Japanese single-coil Squier strat right in front of my NE5D on the top teir (using the same mic to sit at the keyboards and stand to play guitar) and have no problem. I do plug directly into a Boss ME-70 mfx and out of the amp sim/record out directly to FOH (no amp/head). I always plug my boards and ME-70 into the same power strip, with the low-voltage power supplies plugged in the the end farthest from the power cord.
pbinCA wrote: Power-supply hum is 50Hz (60 Hz North America) plus harmonics. A switching power supply chops the power waveform rectangularly, and generates a wideband harmonic series. It would help to know which power supply the Nord E5 embed, and what kind of radiated EM noise test it goes through.
pbinCA wrote:I tested out my Electro 5d with electric guitar (Fender telecaster), and confirm that there is a power supply noise radiation problem. It's the worst right in front of the power cord entry, and center of keyboard. Nord could solve this by adequately shielding the power supply inside the enclosure.
pbinCA wrote:Remember, a broken clock is correct 2 times a day.
60 Hz is close to a low B (61.73 Hz)
50 Hz is close to a low G (49 Hz)
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