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Noise Diagnosis - Notes

NOISE CAN ENTER A RADIO SYSTEM FOUR WAYS:

FRONTWAY


Any noise which can be eliminated by unplugging the Antenna from the back of the Radio

Causes:

Poor grounding of: the Antenna, the Radio, some electrical component or body parts

- Defective or marginal components: relays, solenoids, switches, electric motors

- Something near the antenna lead-in or corrosion at lead-in connections

Solutions:

Always verify grounding first: if more than one component interferes, a poor ground probably exists.

Pinpoint the source: suppress, shield or replace. Re-route noisy wires if necessary.

SIDEWAYS

Any noise which gets quieter when slowly removing the Radio from the Instrument Panel

Causes:

Noisy wiring or hoses behind or on top of the Radio or antenna lead-in

Solutions:

Suppress or shield the noisy wire or hose, or re-route it. Shield the Radio.

BACKWAY

Any noise that can be heard at minimum volume

Causes:

Poor grounding of: the Radio, an unsuppressed electrical component, poorly routed wires or defective suppression of an electrical component

Solutions:

Suppression can be installed at the source (preferable), the Radio, or both.

Pops are best suppressed using capacitors. Squeals and buzzes are best suppressed using filters.

HARNESS RELATED NOISES

Causes:

Pinched wires, broken or shorted audio wires, defective connectors or speakers, defective Delco-GM/Bose amplifier, faulty shield wires, screw through wire harness

Solutions:

Localize problem to one side, front or back or speaker location.

Verify speaker/amplifier operation using spare speaker/amplifier.

Use channel swap harness (1226788) to check wiring.

Track wiring for defects, breaks or shorts.

Note:

Harness related noises have a tendency to be intermittent.