JDBarrow
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It sounds like a phonograph needle that hits a big scratch on a record. It can make my heart jump at times. This periodic pop only happens under the following circumstances:
1. a computer is the hard-wired audio source (via analog audio cable and green line output jack on motherboard) for the Marantz audio receiver hooked up to the sub. I have to use the CD in jack on the Marantz as it has no RCA input for computer specifically. I use a 3.50 mm OUT to RCA L/R plugs IN cable.
and
2. the audio media is a PC game like N3V Games/Auran Railroad Simulator
or
3. the computer is idle, not playing any sound media at all
I have not noticed any POP when the active PC-based audio media is something like a You Tube video stream or digital music playback on something like Windows Media Player or Groove Audio. There is never a POP if the source is television audio, AM/FM receiver audio or Bluetooth-paired telephone audio.
Please, pray tell me, what these intermittent POPs are all about. My computer does have a noise suppressor cable on the CPU cooling fan.
1. a computer is the hard-wired audio source (via analog audio cable and green line output jack on motherboard) for the Marantz audio receiver hooked up to the sub. I have to use the CD in jack on the Marantz as it has no RCA input for computer specifically. I use a 3.50 mm OUT to RCA L/R plugs IN cable.
and
2. the audio media is a PC game like N3V Games/Auran Railroad Simulator
or
3. the computer is idle, not playing any sound media at all
I have not noticed any POP when the active PC-based audio media is something like a You Tube video stream or digital music playback on something like Windows Media Player or Groove Audio. There is never a POP if the source is television audio, AM/FM receiver audio or Bluetooth-paired telephone audio.
Please, pray tell me, what these intermittent POPs are all about. My computer does have a noise suppressor cable on the CPU cooling fan.