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Since nobody else is responding to your post I'll offer some ideas... assuming your voltages are all within spec, as you say they are, then it sounds like a ground-loop problem of some sort, or maybe some sort of PT wiring issue? A common construction problem with these units it seems is accidentally grounding the RCA connectors... go through the archives... also, there's a typo (I think/hope) near the beginning of your post that might discourage people from helping you out...
Hi Rolf,PT wiring = Power Transformer wiring, and the typo was "gay" instead of "guy"...I think it's logical to guess that the problem might be related to the modifications... the PT inside the chassis, as previously noted, and also the elimination of the balance and selector switches (I find the "micro" balance switch pretty nice, by the way). Are there any unused traces that should be grounded that are floating? Also, if you can characterize the hum/buzz in more detail that might help... does ...
Could it be the diodes are the wrong type?
So I shouldn't worry to much about moving it out of the cabinet?
Wiring loops, by that you mean cables
Should I ground the pot-chassis to pcb-gnd?
Each input or output should have it's own return (ground) wire going with it. Try and not separate all of these too far from each other, as ground loops are made as soon as you plug in the interconnects. In fact, does buzz change if you unplug one of the channels? Is there buzz without any input?
You'll know by touching it. Now don't go touching any traces or high voltage. I meant touching the various grounded chassis pieces, or RCA shields, or tranny bells, etc. If something is floating and picking up a field, then tying it down will help.