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Heater power comes from the Chime, in which I now have a 6.3V regulator in lieu of R423.
... I am able to perfectly listen to an AM station of 1250khz. This station has a 5000W transmitter 2.5 miles from my house. When connected to the Chime output, the AM station is obvious only when powered off. Once powered on, it goes away. This (AM reception) is also true of my external 12AU7 setup. With it, I do get hum, as might be expected given my shoddy construction and long power leads. The most disappointing aspect is that I can hear and measure the same noise as when using the Chime output. This appears to exclude all of those components as the source of the noise. I did use the same Electro Harmonix tube, so it could be at fault. The only other one I have is a Telefunken, and the result is the same.
It is not dependent upon the grid voltage, which I adjusted with a 25k pot in series with 100k to ground.
Running the heater from a SLA battery changes nothing. If I disconnect B+ from my external board, I believe the noise persists for the second or so it takes to lose power. I'll have to add much more capacitance to it to get more runtime to be sure.
I'm not entirely sure what to make of this. Should I be ordering a third 12AU7 tube to try? Should I be shielding with lead?
Another aspect I've read of is heater to cathode leakage. I believe I saw mention in Morgan Jones' book that this could lead to 1/f noise. I haven't yet tried biasing the heater voltage, which I could easily do with my battery.
The only cause of the noise I can think of now is external. Itmay be possible that the only SS device in the signal circuitbrings about detection of radio station and so adds the noise,because usually there are no such wide-band source in the air.
You almost cannot change the grid voltage because of the CCS inthe cathode.
I don't believe it is tubes, but who knows... I'm almost definitein view that the last stage doesn't have any relation to thenoise. Having high-impedance amplifier now - could you try tofeed it directly with the divider you use for the grid biasing?
Yes, the noise is possible. I believe I read several complaintsabout that even in this forum. But you've said the noise is gonewhen you ground the grid with the help of a capacitor. As soon asthe leakage is between the heater and the cathode the noise isinjected to this part of the circuit (cathode-ground) and shouldnot be affected by grid-ground manipulation. But it is definitelyworth to try - just connect one of the heater pin to cathodewhile using a battery for heating.
Incidentally, none of my other electronics in the house show evidence of broad noise. I'd think if it were present in the air, and so overwhelming, I would notice in other equipment.
I'll see about rigging some shielding. I don't think I've got a metal box large enough to house a UPS for isolated power, the circuits, possibly a scope, and me with the headphones. So, I'll necessarily have some wiring in and out. Will this fatally compromise any test?
Actually, the pre-amplifier isn't all that high-impedance. I built it at 600ohms. I also didn't put a high voltage input cap in it to be able to handle such a high DC offset. Through the coupling capacitor for the Chime, I don't hear anywhere near the same order of noise at the 150k voltage divider. (At 60dB gain, everything is somewhat noisy.)
I see your joke here.
I don't see how you got to input impedance of 600 Ohms...
From my understanding of op-amps and its circuit, the "LNMP" I build should have an input impedance equal to the first resistor. In my case, I used 600ohms there.
Ignoring the increase in 60hz harmonics, there is a large differenceat higher frequencies. By ear, I still contend that these don't sound very different.
This next plot has the same fushia line in addition to the following,described bottom to top at the 10khz position:* NC: No connection. This is my 3 inch jumper floating.* v401gridvol0: V401 grid. Volume control is at nil.* V400gridvol0: V400 grid. Volume control is at nil.* 295V: 295V rail, at the top of R429.* V401platevol0: V401 plate. Volume control is at nil.* V401cathodevol0: Normal output connectivity. Volume control is at nil.
There does seem to be some volume dependence of the noise. At nil or full volume, 60hz harmonics are more audible. They are reduced at 50% volume. The noise sounds lower at 100% volume, though I can't rationalize this with the following plot.