Battling iPhone’s GSM buzz - First impressions of the M-Audio Studio Pro 3 Desktop Audio Monitors

Sun, 01/20/2008 - 03:11 — Jonathan Curtin

Edit: This is the first in a series of four articles on Battling iPhone's GSM Buzz. A solution to this issue is described in the fourth installment.

I wanted to share this experience with the  9to5Mac readers, because I thought that many of you might be in a similar situation. Like many happy new iPhone owners this summer, I immediately set up my iPhone dock on my desk and plugged it into my Mac. I’d had a GSM phone before, so I was well aware of GSM buzz. My old T-Mobile/Nokia rig would drive my crappy Logitech speakers nuts in the seconds before I would receive a call. It was never much of an issue, though, because unlike the iPhone, I charged the Nokia phone in the other room, away from the computer speakers.

As you know, the iPhone is different. Syncing and charging require docking the thing, and so the GSM buzz in the speakers is a fact of life when I’m working at my desk. And it seems to occur more often than it did with my old phone (probably something to do with it being docked to a firewire cable, which could be a conduit for the radio signal).

I got annoyed enough with the buzz-buzz-buzz of my Logitechs that I started to look into  properly-shielded speakers. I’ve now learned that the shielding is mostly to guard your display from speaker interference, and has less to do with protecting the speakers from GSM buzz. Here are a few articles that I found helpful in explaining the situation:

http://advice.cio.com/al_sacco/why_your_blackberry_causes_speakers_to_buzz
http://www.smartdevicecentral.com/article/that+crazy+gsm+buzz/199379_1.aspx
http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=6249909

And many people claim to have solved the problem with artfully-placed tinfoil:

http://www.macosxhints.com/article.php?story=20071231014727222
http://gizmodo.com/gadgets/how-to/aluminum-foil-stops-iphone-car-tape-ad...

I find this absurd. I didn’t spend $399 on an iPhone just to have to wrap it in tin foil. In the car, I’ve taken to just using my old iPod for audio, which seems like a good way for it to spend its retirement. But at home, I need a real fix.

I decided that $100 would be a reasonable amount of money to spend on a solution. That gives you a clue about the level of annoyance that GSM buzz causes. The most probable culprit was the $15 pair of  Logitech speakers I bought when my circa 1991 speakers, originally purchased for my first mini-CD player, finally died (RIP).

I started reading about speakers in this range. I knew I wanted a 2.0 setup because I didn’t want the clutter of a subwoofer or satellite speakers in my office. I already have a 5.1 system in my living room. Narrowing it down, the choices appeared to be:

•    Bose Companion 2 Series II multimedia speaker system
•    Klipsch Groove PM20 2.0 Speaker System- Black

I had found some complaints about GSM buzz in the Bose product, and I was about to pull the trigger on the Klipsch ones, when I started to read reviews of the M-Audio Studio Pro 3. Amazon had them on sale for $89.28, and the reviews of the sound were very favorable. My thought was that a low-end pro-audio monitor would have better fundamental construction and shielding than a high-end consumer 2.0 computer speaker. I also read a bunch of audiophile hate about Bose in general, which lead me to believe that they use their high margins for marketing rather than on research as they’d like you to believe. The Klipsch pair had some favorable comments specifically about a lack of GSM buzz, so I was conflicted, but I rolled the dice on the M-Audio product because it is housed in a “custom tuned wood cabinet” and the Klipsch is just plastic.

I was very pleased to get my “Super Saver” shipment a full 5 days before Amazon projected, and I installed the set last night. It came with a .125” plug for my G5 tower’s audio card that splits into two RCA connectors on the right hand speaker/amplifier unit. Then there’s another .125” connector to the left speaker, and a simple, brickless power plug for the amp. It also came with little wedges that angle the speakers upward, which I deployed immediately because I have another M-Audio product, the M-Audio Keystation 61es Keyboard, and the wedge prevents the back of the keyboard from muffling the sound. Oh, the sound.

Glorious, rich midtones. I never appreciated midtones in a speaker until I got these. I heard detail in the music I’ve never heard on headphones or my 5.1 system. The bass is clear and not muddy, but audiophiles will want a sub (they always do). I also noticed that the high-frequency sound did not appear as painfully loud as with headphones, possibly because they are so well-balanced with the midrange.

I played a couple of whole albums in a row on itunes and various other single songs I was very familiar with, so I would know if I heard any interference, and I started calling my iPhone with my home phone. I called myself with the iPhone in the dock and directly on top of the speakers. No interference. I docked and undocked the iPhone several times. No interference. I used the iPhone to call my 5.8ghz cordless phone (also on the desk next to a speaker). No interference. Then I just did some work with itunes on and the iPhone docked. I enjoyed the sound and heard not a peep of interference. I was very pleased with myself.

Later that evening, as is my wont, I did one last check of the e-mail before bed, and also to admire my new purchase. The speakers were on, but the music was off, and the iPhone was docked. Suddenly, I had about 3 seconds of “bp-bp-bp-bp-bp-bp-bzzzzz” --The dreaded GSM buzz had finally dropped in for a visit. I winced in disappointment. It was quieter on these speakers, and only happened once last night (as opposed to the logitechs, which would dependably buzz every time I docked the iPhone and in pretty regular 5-minute intervals) so I think I’ll spare myself the trouble of repacking the speakers and shipping them back to Amazon. The sound is so good, that I think I can put up with a fainter, less chronic kind of GSM Buzz. But I still have my receipt, so we’ll see in the next few days. I can’t help but wonder how this article would have ended up if I’d chosen the Klipsch speakers, though.

My next course of action will be to investigate the Ferrite beads supposedly available at Radioshack, and see if they help at all. I was able to find one product on their website that looks promising, though I’m not holding my breath:
http://www.radioshack.com/product/index.jsp?productId=2103222

If anyone has a solution to this problem that does not involve tin foil, please post in the comments.

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Comments

Not really a solution to

Not really a solution to your current problem but a UMTS iPhone would solve the problem since there is no GSM buzz when it is running in UMTS mode:)

That was a really a reason for me to switch to a UMTS phone since the GSM mode interfered with my hearing aids.

Correct me if I'm wrong, but

Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't believe a UMTS iPhone is available anywhere...

If you're so blown away with

If you're so blown away with your $89 M-Audio speakers, try some real ones, like the M-Audio BX-8a studio monitors. They've had a huge impact on the quality of my compositions and, in particular, my mixes.

I get no GSM audio through that sound chain. However, my effin' Cisco phone's speaker will blast out GSM interference regardless of the state of the Cisco phone, other than unplugged. It sucks.

Positioning the phone further away from whatever's picking up the sound can have a nice muting effect.

Did you miss the part about

Did you miss the part about wanting to spend around 100 dollars? Amazon has the BX-8a for 462 dollars...

I am really pleased with my Volkswagen Jetta.

If you like that, you should try a BWM M-5. It will blow you away.

Duh!

I had the same problem using

I had the same problem using wireless headphones, solved it my charging my iPhone across the room using the iPod charger. The only time I plug the iPhone into the computer is for syncing and/or updates.

I have gsm phones for nearly

I have gsm phones for nearly 3 years now and I always had that buzz that sometimes was so loud it would scare me. Since I have the iphone, I never experienced any buzz with my laptop, or speakers or even the tv. I thought they made something into the iphone so it won't buzz like the other gsm phones but I guess I am juste lucky..

The problem u mentioned is

The problem u mentioned is probably caused by an unbalanced audio interface. A balanced audio interf. is using 3 pin-XLR connectors. Jack (headphone) and RCA (tulp) connectors are unbalanced and have problems with electrical jamming (like cell phones...)

Hope this helps you.

Exactly!  I've found that

Exactly!  I've found that my $29 pair of Logitech USB powered v20 speakers have zero GSM buzz. I've not researched higer-end options for USB connected speakers, but that would be the way I would go.

Amen for writing this

Amen for writing this report... please let us know if the Radio Shack device works, this is, by far, the greatest downfall of the iPhone. Do you truly believe it will work? Any other ideas from readers??

This drives me absolutely

This drives me absolutely insane. So much that I rarely dock my iPhone any more. Sadly, I have nowhere to put the dock except on top of my KRK 6RP studio monitors. The GSM buzz is ridiculous when a call comes in.

Honestly, I'm surprised these monitors aren't better shielded. They're by no means top-of-the-line, but they aren't cheap gaming speakers, either. (Oh, and BTW, I'm using a balanced (XLR) connection.)

The buzz is not created by

The buzz is not created by your speakers, but the amplifier that the speakers are connected to. If you disconnect the speaker cable, the buzz is gone, right? You need an amplifier that is properly shielded. The iPhone is actually doing nothing wrong, it's transmitting in its proper frequency band, but the preamp stage of your amplifier is picking up and amplifying these radio signals. Shielding the phone will not help, because if the cellular base station detects that the upling signal level drops from the phone, it will instruct the phone to power up the transmission. Another soultion could be to place a shield between the amp and the phone, or to shield the amp with a wire mesh. UMTS will not have this problem, because it is a high bandwith spread spectrum system that unshielded preamps are not sensitive to.

In my case, the amp is built

In my case, the amp is built in to the right speaker. How would one shield an integrated amp? I've tried the ferrite cores, and they are useless. I bought three and wrapped them around all of the cables (power, speaker, firewire) and the buzz is as bad as ever.

I have Klipsch desktop

I have Klipsch desktop speakers within 6" of my docked iPhone. Never a pop, click, hum, or buzz. (They sound great, too.)

Thank you, kind reader.

Thank you, kind reader. Yours was just the comment I needed to box up the M-Audio pair and return them to Amazon. I will purchase and test the Klipsch pair and faithfully report back here.

just thought i'd point out

just thought i'd point out that the iphone does not use a firewire cable, unlike early versions of the ipod. USB only.

Yes, right. Sorry about

Yes, right. Sorry about that. Old habits die hard.

I brought my iPhone to the

I brought my iPhone to the bedroom and put it on the night table next to a Sony clock radio.  The buzz is so intolerable the iPhone had to be moved to the other side of the room, otherwise an alarm wouldn't be needed as I would get no sleep to be awakened from.

  iphone buzz solution: You

 

iphone buzz solution:

You dont need new speakers! For about $4 you can get these "snap choke core" ferrite beads that clip on to the existing speaker wire and have completely eliminated the buzz on my iphone. Radio shack has them. just FYI, my computer speakers are the JBL martian looking things and I am so relieved to have this annoyance solved!!!

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