i will do it shortly Sir and let you know
i made it on a blank pcbAn open-circuit input (no mic connected), unshielded input wiring, and building on a breadboard are all recipes for hum and interference pick-up.
If you have the mic clipped to your chest (ouch!) or shirt you will pick up a lot of noise from clothing movement.
yes Sir i know that i have created many threads but that time the oroblem was related to rfi when i had connected the laptop to the charger but this time the problem arise when laptop is on battery mode that is why i askedHello,
Looking back, how many threads do you need for your preamp:
Mic Preamp Giving Ground Loop Problem
Electret Condenser Microphone Preamp
DIY PreAmp Ground Noise/Loop/Hum/Buzz/Distortion
There already have been giving a lot of information in those threads.
Bertus
i hv connected the input and output with shielded wire and did what you said to do with 47uF and 10k resister but still getting the same inteference one thing i noticed that when i am touching both ceramic disc 470nf capacitor kind of response i can observe in my audacity like inteference increases after touching and holding itOf course the cable from a microphone to a preamp must be shielded audio cable. The output cable from the preamp to a recorder or power amplifier also must be a shielded audio cable. Your unshielded wires are antennas that pickup interference.
The LM358 has many audio problems which is why it is never used as a mic preamp. Use an audio IC instead.
If your power supply produces humming or buzzing then try using a battery instead to see if the noises disappear.
The circuit you built has a gain that is less than 1M/47k= 21.3 times which is much too low for a microphone that needs a gain 20 times higher.
thank you very much audio guru my problem disapeared like it will never come again i hv purchased a new 9v battery now working perfect gain is at even higher than what i had wanted to because of switching to usb 5v to 9v battery now i hv to work on background noise cancellationi hv connected the input and output with shielded wire and did what you said to do with 47uF and 10k resister but still getting the same inteference one thing i noticed that when i am touching both ceramic disc 470nf capacitor kind of response i can observe in my audacity like inteference increases after touching and holding it
thanks sir lots of knowledge i gained here thanks a a for helping meHello,
In addition what @Audioguru said, you might want to have a look at the following articles:
https://sound-au.com/articles/microphones.htm
https://sound-au.com/articles/microphones-2.htm
https://sound-au.com/articles/mic-electret.htm
Bertus
yes sir noise was because of usbYour interference problem was caused by noisy USB?
You are probably using a cheap ordinary electret mic that is omni-directional and it picks up sounds front, sides and back.
Please describe the background noise sounds (low frequency rumble, high frequency hiss, traffic sounds or voices.
Digikey in United States and Canada lists electret mics from 5 manufacturers. They have in stock today hundreds of ordinary omni-directional mics that sound great and 25 different "noise cancelling mics" and 25 different directional mics.
The omni mics sound great because they have a flat frequency response.
The noise cancelling mics reduce low frequencies a lot from the front (a thin and tinny sound) when the mic is close to your mouth and reduces distant low frequencies a little more. They also reduce distant high frequencies a little.
The directional mics also reduce low frequencies from the front (but not as much reduction as the bad sound from the noise cancelling mics) and reduce high frequencies a lot from the sides and rear.
Simply make the omni microphone closer to your mouth (a gooseneck type that is directly in front of your mouth).
shoud i short the gnd n +ve of the mic with a resistorThe Japanese NJM5532D is slightly better than the American OPA2134, but you probably will not hear any difference.
AliExpress sells cheap no-name-brand Chinese junk!
The hiss you hear could be produced by the mic (short it to see if the hiss is reduced) or by the opamp and its resistors.