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Simple shorting plugs....take a cheap RCA interconnect, (the ones that get shipped with most consumer products), cut the connectors off leaving about 1/2" of wire. Strip the wire and twist the center signal wire and ground wire together. That shorts the input to ground when you plug the sorting plug into the preamp's input RCA's. You only need to short the pair of input RCA's that are switched into the circuit. Once the inputs are shorted and the preamp powered, set your DMM to frequency. Put the red lead into the output RCA to make contact as center pin and the black lead to the outside of the RCA to ground. Make sure that the red lead does not contact and short against the ground. Check both R & L outputs. The DMM will display the frequency of the hum at the output.Cheers,Geary
Geary, thanks for the tip on shorting the inputs, learned something today!! I made the shorting connectors. I set my DMM to hz, set red lead inside the output RCA and the black lead on the shield of the same RCA connector. I did this for all four outputs. For all four outputs I got a reading of 60hz. Thanks for the help Geary!
So now you pretty much know that you have a grounding issue. Try the cheater plug to lift the ground at the IEC plug. Remeasure. You can measure back along the signal path to try to find where it is being introduced. Start at the inputs and work toward the outputs. You could also have a bad solder joint in the grounding circuit. I would re-flow the solder joints. It's quite a bit of work, but sounds like it arrived to you with the issue.Grounding issue can be tough to track down. Be deliberate and careful.Cheers,Geary
Geary, I disconnected the internal ground connector that was connected to power cord, turned the amp on and tested just the same as I had before. This time it started a at 60hz again but once I touched the black lead to the ground of the rca connector it went down to 0hz within a couple of seconds. Is the chassis ground the problem here?
Where was the red lead? The only chassis grounds are on the back to the grounding post. The rest are circuit grounds.
If I am understanding correctly...no hum if the AC ground is lifted?
It seems something changes during the experiments...
It's been unplugged for 5+ minutes and my speakers still have the hum.
...the buzz/hum cuts off as soon as I pull the power cord out of the clarinet...
Poty, in both instances the hum fades away gradually.
I powered it up, got the hum, but then the hum persisted after I disconnected everything. At this point the hum gradually fades away and is gone within about 10 seconds or so.
I should have stayed on top of this. My guess is that you have portions of chassis that are not connected to EARTH. The black anodize is an insulator. I got around this by using a dremel to grind off the anodize where the "nuts" go, thereby giving a metal to metal contact when the pieces are screwed together. Also, take a countersink to all the screw head areas and drill them out. Doing this will make sure all the pieces connect to the back panel, which has the EARTH lug and connection.jh
1. Check the wire from the PCB to the ground point at the back side of the enclosure. I'd also try to unplug it from the PCB and listen what will happen.I checked the wire going from pcb earth to ground on chassis, it looked fine. Also tried unplugging the ground connector on the pcb side, the hum became louder. I also tried sanding off the black paint from the chassis where the ground is connector to expose bare metal, this did not help.
3. To eliminate the possibility to induce the noise from the following gear - unplug the following gear from the mains (with Clarinet on) and listen what will happen.The only thing I had plugged in were the shorted rca connector I had previously made, also tried with nothing plugged in.
... the bad or dry electrolytical capacitors, but then there should be no noise after powering off or unplugging from mains...Any way I can test the capacitors?
Well... At least you are sure the connection is working.Saying "the following gear" I was thinking about power amplifier! :)Do not be in haste. There are not enough evidence for the diagnosis. I'd take serious attention to the Jim's words about shielding. It was the next thing I was going to suggest after checking the power amplifier influence. At this point of experimenting there are only 3 possible source of noise left:1. Some leakage from the power amplifier (but you tried the device with other power amplifiers with the same effect).2. Weak tubes (SRPP schematic used in the Clarinet is more demanding to the top tube in terms of cathode-heater voltage, so some good NOS or old tubes may behave not very good at this point). (but turning the device off should eliminate low-frequency hum almost instantly)3. External EMI stray pick up.IMHO, the third point is much closer in explaining the device behavior than others.P.S. By the way - is the hum depends on volume control/balance control position?
Just in case (if you have time after you sandwork):- With powered off device - measure the resistance between the central pins of output RCAs and their shells.- Try to power on the device without V301 (the 12AU7 closer to the rectifier tube).But I agree with Jim that most probable thing is lack of shielding.
Are the RCA shields isolated from chassis?jh
So sanded down contact points on case, 20 points on the case (8 on each side panel, four on the bottom panel). Made little to no difference on the hum.
Tried powering it up without the 12AU7 closest to the rectifier, hum persisted.
The DMM got no reading between the central pin and the shell. If I connected one set of RCA's on the output and left the other not connected, the one left unconnected measured at about 325kohms's.
The RCA's are shielded, they have a plastic shield around each RCA connector.