Not 100% sure where this thread should go, so it's ending up here. A couple months ago I got a hydrophone to try and record some of the sounds of my tank, partially inspired by the snapping sounds from my copperband eating and partially with the occasional discussion of noise pollution and its effect on our animals. I finally got around to setting it up and testing things out, and earlier today made my first recording during feeding time:
I used an Aquarian Scientific AS-1 hydrophone (with their PA-6 preamp) on a 3d printed bracket that dangled it into the tank a ways away from the glass, then turned everything off for getting as little noise as possible, but I was getting quite a bit of electrical hum, so for this recording I also had a Shure A15HP and 30 dB worth of low band attenuation in software - and the hum is still certainly present. It's neat to be able to pick out some of the sources particularly, but I'd say the recording is largely uneventful - a useful proof of concept.
Of course, mere hours later, I decided I should try a grounding probe in the tank to see if it would help with the hum.... and it removed it entirely. So I've formulated my first rule for recording in an aquarium: use a grounding probe.
It probably won't be required (or at least, as required) if your hydrophone and recorder are battery powered (not ground referenced), but for my setup it makes all the difference (and yes, there is slight measurable AC voltage in the water, though the amount drops when equipment is shut off.) I'll be making a second version of the feeding video with the lower noise floor and better fidelity in the low range, but I plan on trying to get the hydrophone closer to individuals (shrimp, crabs) to try to get more targeted sounds, I want to see what the sound difference is between various pumps/powerheads (and when they are clean vs. dirty), doing some testing to see what actually makes it into the tank from noise outside of it, and since the AS-1 was chosen for its high frequency response, I want to see if I can detect any ultrasonic noises from my livestock.
I used an Aquarian Scientific AS-1 hydrophone (with their PA-6 preamp) on a 3d printed bracket that dangled it into the tank a ways away from the glass, then turned everything off for getting as little noise as possible, but I was getting quite a bit of electrical hum, so for this recording I also had a Shure A15HP and 30 dB worth of low band attenuation in software - and the hum is still certainly present. It's neat to be able to pick out some of the sources particularly, but I'd say the recording is largely uneventful - a useful proof of concept.
Of course, mere hours later, I decided I should try a grounding probe in the tank to see if it would help with the hum.... and it removed it entirely. So I've formulated my first rule for recording in an aquarium: use a grounding probe.
It probably won't be required (or at least, as required) if your hydrophone and recorder are battery powered (not ground referenced), but for my setup it makes all the difference (and yes, there is slight measurable AC voltage in the water, though the amount drops when equipment is shut off.) I'll be making a second version of the feeding video with the lower noise floor and better fidelity in the low range, but I plan on trying to get the hydrophone closer to individuals (shrimp, crabs) to try to get more targeted sounds, I want to see what the sound difference is between various pumps/powerheads (and when they are clean vs. dirty), doing some testing to see what actually makes it into the tank from noise outside of it, and since the AS-1 was chosen for its high frequency response, I want to see if I can detect any ultrasonic noises from my livestock.