Distance between conduits? Shielding?

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the dreamer
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Distance between conduits? Shielding?

Post by the dreamer »

Hello Aaron et all,
As I understand I will have to separate audiolines from headphone-feeds and speakercacles (after amp) and also electric wires, right?

So when I build plastic conduits into the soon to pour concrete floating floor, how far must the distance fom the audiolines be?

Can I shield the conduits with something (aluminim foil?) when crossings or small distance is not avoidable?

I intend to make the conduits not larger than 2,5 to 3cm inner-diameter. Do you know of problems with audiocables to pull through with this?

I suppose their is no problem with ethernet, firewire, USB, monitorcables, etc?

Other tipps?

Thanks,

Florian
the dreamer
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Post by the dreamer »

Bump! :D
knightfly
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Post by knightfly »

Florian, are you using plastic because metal conduit has tripled in price in the last year or so, or for some other reason? I ask because one of the benefits of using metal is that it can be bonded to your grounding system and will provide quite a bit of shielding, therefore requiring less distance between conduits for purposes of avoiding any crosstalk.

As a general rule, power should be separate from everything, and if it MUST run parallel keep it at least a foot away from ANYTHING else, and at least TWO feet from low level analog (mic lines) - all digital (AES, SP/DIF, Midi, USB, Firewire, Cat5, etc) can be run in the same conduit, but should stay at least a foot away from power. I'd keep any low level analog at least 6" away from mid or high level analog, a foot away from digital, and 2 feet away from AC power. Speaker level stuff should be at least 6" from line level analog, and at least a foot from mic level analog.

This isn't entirely arbitrary, I've actually had feedback problems when mic lines get too close to speaker lines, one instance I remember had about 3" gap between speaker and mic lines for about 10 feet and it howled like a banshee.

We've all run line level audio in the same snake as mics for LIVE use and gotten away with it, but I wouldn't do that in a recording situation... Steve

Rough synopsis - these are MINIMUMS, the way I'd lay it out - Power/12"/digital/3"/speaker-headphone/6"/line level/6"/mic level - these distances are between conduits, and are for METAL conduit. I'd increase them by at least half for plastic. (Keep in mind I'm probably overdoing, but once it's in concrete it's tough to change)
Soooo, when a Musician dies, do they hear the white noise at the end of the tunnel??!? Hmmmm...
the dreamer
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Post by the dreamer »

Thanks Steve,
(Keep in mind I'm probably overdoing, but once it's in concrete it's tough to change)
Yes, I got a general idea about the issue, but this is the reason I asked. What I do must be"rock solid" :D !
Florian, are you using plastic because metal conduit has tripled in price in the last year or so, or for some other reason?
Yes, but you convinced me to ask for prices of copperpipes again!

This might be a dump question :oops:: all the cables come out of the floor and running to gear. Sometimes it's hard not to mix power, audio, etc., especially when the powerplug and the lines, etc are both at the backside. I had never a problem so far but I'm curious if there could be one or what you would take into consideration when building from scratch (both the CR and the desk)?
the dreamer
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Post by the dreamer »

bump
knightfly
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Post by knightfly »

I tend to run all power in a rack to one side of the rear of the rack (at the very back) and everything else to the opposite side - any digital lines I run down the center, and try to bundle any mic level stuff as far away from everything as possible. Any unavoidable crossings between power and the other stuff at right angles.

Not all gear has the power connection on the same side, but you can usually run power from the connection on the rear diagonally to the opposite corner of the rear free space (behind the unit) if its power is backward from the rest of the gear; then, keep audio lines close to the chassis while running them to the "signal" side of the rack.

For adjacent racks, you should alternate these choices; IOW, if you have 3 or 4 side-by-side racks (like in a producer's desk) the first one should have power on the left, signal on the right; the next one should have signal on the left, power on the right; then power on the left, signal on the right, etc - this puts all power from any two adjacent racks close to each other, and no signal bundle will be close to a power bundle.

Copper conduit? Seems really expensive: I was referring to galvanized steel, known here as EMT (Electrical/Metallic Tubing) - its price has gone from about $3 USD per 10' stick of 3/4", to about $10 USD in the last year or so. Apparently due mainly to massive building spree in China, etc - same thing happened to 1" foam board insulation; last I checked, it was around $1.50 per sq. foot. (Fortunately us studio types don't care about foam board, but the conduit thing pissed me off :evil: ... Steve
Soooo, when a Musician dies, do they hear the white noise at the end of the tunnel??!? Hmmmm...
the dreamer
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Post by the dreamer »

Steve, thanks!
the dreamer
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Post by the dreamer »

I will have lines and wires that I intend to install without conduit.
What do you think about wrapping these in aluminium foil for shielding?

Thanks
Florian
Sword9
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Post by Sword9 »

I'm going to go with useless. But I could be wrong.
SaM Harrison
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knightfly
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Post by knightfly »

Actually, depending on the wires it could be worse than useless; I've not personally experienced this, but have been told that shielded speaker wire can cause feedback problems - something to do with excess capacitance, maybe? Not sure.

If your individual wires are properly shielded, then adding aluminum foil may actually increase the capacitance of the wires which would roll off your high frequency a bit. Not a good idea.

Possibly the single best reference for proper wiring of audio gear is Rane note 110 -

http://www.rane.com/note110.html

HTH... Steve
Soooo, when a Musician dies, do they hear the white noise at the end of the tunnel??!? Hmmmm...
the dreamer
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Joined: Thu Dec 11, 2003 3:02 am
Location: in the alps / Europe

Post by the dreamer »

This may be a bit anal, but I want to do it as good as possible.
Do you think its possible to shield electrical cables with foil which run within the concrete without duct? So they don't interfere with audiolines.
Thanks.
kent clemmons
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Post by kent clemmons »

Florian,
Wrapping cabling in foil is a fine idea. There are a few considerations but it will help with electric field suseptibility. It is not going to help with radiated magnetic fields (like the 60 Hz and harmonics coming off the power lines) but it will keep them quiet. The idea is to get a good amount of foil around the cable to completely cover it, no open seams. Because you are in the audio frequency, ground the foil on the source end only (single point ground). The only reliable medium to shield from magnetic fields is mu metals. They make mu metal conduit but it is pricy. I'm at home but when I get to work I can give you a better idea of spacing. You probably know that fiber is immune to spacing requirements.
Kent Clemmons
Venue Studios
the dreamer
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Post by the dreamer »

Hi Kent,
thanks for your answer. Good there is an e-mail notifier cause I'm not much floating around in the forums these days...lot's of work.
I'm at home but when I get to work I can give you a better idea of spacing
That would be great!

What is mu metal, never heard that?
You probably know that fiber is immune to spacing requirements.
What are you talking about here? Glassfiber lightpipes? I got no clue.

Thanks again
Florian
Harald F. Metzner
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Post by Harald F. Metzner »

Hello,
What is mu metal, never heard that?
It's called permalloy, it is a metall used for shielding, read this:

http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mumetall

(in german).

Harald
the dreamer
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Post by the dreamer »

Thanks Harald!
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