Buz/hum active speaker with new turntable

freddyonderstal

Active member
Mar 7, 2026
22
7
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This afternoon I installed my new turntable, a Thorens TD 403 DD. My active speakers are the floor-standing Argon Audio Fenris A55.

The speakers have a built-in amplifier; the turntable is connected to the Phono input via an RCA cable.

If the turntable is off and I only have the speakers on, I hear a soft hum/buzz when I turn the volume up to halfway. Below that, it is barely audible, if at all. Again: the turntable is off but connected, and I have also connected the ground cable between the speaker and the turntable.

Is this normal? How can I fix this?
Can this do any harm to my new turntable?
 
Only the turntable is connected to the speaker.
Turn the speakers volume to minimum.
Disconnect both RCA signal plugs from the turntable.
With the speaker end of the twin RCA cable still plugged into the phono input:

Put a direct short circuit across both left and right open ended RCA plugs (between the central pin and outer plug body).
Then turn the speaker volume up.
You should have silence at the halfway point.
See whether you have.
 
argon-audio-fenris-a55-anschlusspannel-1024x683.jpg
Tried something;

On the back of the active speaker is a volume knob. It was at 8 o’clock. When I raise the volume with the remote control, I could go 3 presses up before the buzz is becoming hearable.

I turned the knob on the back of the speaker on 12 o’clock, the buz becomes hearable after 7 presses on the remote control.

Can anyone explain how this is possible? The volume knob at the back of the speaker is normal output volume, right?
 
argon-audio-fenris-a55-anschlusspannel-1024x683.jpg
Tried something;

On the back of the active speaker is a volume knob. It was at 8 o’clock. When I raise the volume with the remote control, I could go 3 presses up before the buzz is becoming hearable.

I turned the knob on the back of the speaker on 12 o’clock, the buz becomes hearable after 7 presses on the remote control.

Can anyone explain how this is possible? The volume knob at the back of the speaker is normal output volume, right?
Remote and physical volume control effectively do the same thing.
You're going off at a tangent.
Some speakers with built-in amps have undesirable, inherent background noise.
You need to know whether yours are sufficiently quiet - before questioning anything connected to them.
 

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