OK, and now I am assuming that the op-amp supply is bi-polar, referenced to some "zero voltage" common. Which may, or not, be "ground".Oh the supply terminals. That makes sense to shield the op amp from the power supply. I’ll try that.
OK, I did not explain adequately, my fault. This is not a bipolar supply circuit, which is made very clear by the fact that the + inputs are biased to about half Vcc.: R9 &R10,, R3 & R4 are responsible for that.I may not fully understand the terminology. I am using a single output 9v supply, just 2 terminals. + and gnd.
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Especially with battery powered "stomp boxes" and many others as well, that is the case. But on this very same forum is a situation with a Bheringer brand studio monitor running bipolar power in all sections. So now you have a small addition to your knowledge base, and I am reminded that not everybody has the same technical background. Thanks for that. I do own one of those single supply pedals, and original "CryBaby" pedal, which I believe is a variable band pass filter device. It comes from an era when ICs were neither common nor cheap.Oh, ok. I think I understand the advantage. Unfortunately in the music world, single output supplies are the norm, 9v being the standard with 12, 15, 18v sometimes being options.

Huh. Behringer is a mixed bag. Historically they were cheap, cheap, cheap. But in recent years they have began to impressed me. Their X32 mixing board is a fantastic value, and they have a few other musical items that are pretty darn good for the money. It's interesting they use a bipolar supply. I suspect larger items like amps and speakers, etc. could afford more complicated power supplies both cost and space wise. But in the pedal arena it hasn't taken off yet.Especially with battery powered "stomp boxes" and many others as well, that is the case. But on this very same forum is a situation with a Bheringer brand studio monitor running bipolar power in all sections. So now you have a small addition to your knowledge base, and I am reminded that not everybody has the same technical background. Thanks for that. I do own one of those single supply pedals, and original "CryBaby" pedal, which I believe is a variable band pass filter device. It comes from an era when ICs were neither common nor cheap.
Blame Boss. When they came out with pedals back in the 70s/80's they were center negative and to this day 90% of all musical stuff I've ever seen are center negative. Although there are many companies who are trying to change the tide with center positive, it's hard (requires adapters) because most musicians just want it to be all the same standard Boss 5.5/2.1mm center negative.I dislike center negative connections rather strongly. Because I had a lot of smoke excape from a fully remote controlled color camera that used center negative on the power connector. three axis panning plus zoom, focus and iris control All smoked because of center negative.







OK, and itis interesting that the interference was from an external source. Now I am wondering what sort of external source, for my own education. I have been fortunate to have only encountered outside interference with a correctly wired sound system once, which was a case of the power wires for the sound system ran in a long conduit next to wires feeding a bank of 1200watt triac dimmers. The fix for that interference noise problem was to open the green-wire ground connection of the sound system. The ultimate solution will be to install a separate power feed from the breaker panel to the sound system. Not simple in a cement block construction building.The helicopter sounds are from RF interference, I found 2 solutions:
1) a grounded enclosure. Previously I put the circuit in a metal enclosure... but because the dc jack was negative center, I didn't mount it to the enclosure (because it shorted out), so it was floating. Well that didn't do any good. Once I switched the jack polarity and made it positive center and mounted it to the enclosure, it did it's job.
2) the 100 pF across the output of the op amp also works withOUT an enclosure... but this is not how op amps are suppose to work.
@Audioguru again and others have mentioned before how important a grounded enclosure is, but I didn't fully understand the ramifications. So I learned some stuff this weekend, thanks for all the input.