- Reaction score
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Hi lolb72
A quick thought after seeing your photo's.
It would be worth swapping the HDMI cable you are using for the Blu-ray player, for the PC one.
Or as a quick test, just take that lead out of the Blu-ray and put in in the PC, to see it it changes the situation at all.
I suspect the ferrites might be a red herring - in my limited experience they seem more to do with getting equipment to pass EMC tests (emissions?), and I fear their effect may be too subtle to help here.
I'd pin my hopes on a socket strip with an EMI filter.
Or go the whole way and invest in a UPS, which would also tackle any voltage dip issue as described by marconi.
A quick thought after seeing your photo's.
It would be worth swapping the HDMI cable you are using for the Blu-ray player, for the PC one.
Or as a quick test, just take that lead out of the Blu-ray and put in in the PC, to see it it changes the situation at all.
I suspect the ferrites might be a red herring - in my limited experience they seem more to do with getting equipment to pass EMC tests (emissions?), and I fear their effect may be too subtle to help here.
I'd pin my hopes on a socket strip with an EMI filter.
Or go the whole way and invest in a UPS, which would also tackle any voltage dip issue as described by marconi.