Ray,
The shaft to the switch could be changed to a non metallic material.One of our club members tried a wood dowel in a passive instead of the metal shaft with very good success.Lower noise floor as RFI could not affect wood.The wood shaft also has different resonant characteristics which again lowered the noise floor.The connections were hot glued as they permanant.
We constructed a Tiger Maple enclosure for the TVC as well as metal[maple was lined with foil to block EMI,RFI.
The maple unit sounded better.What really did the trick was mounting the trannies on 3/8"TH. ebony.This move was shocking,there was just more music.
It appears resonance has an affect on the trannies,in some fashion,next up is spruce coated with violin varnish as per Mother of Tone.The spruce woks real well UNDER components,NO FEET,with a flush mount.Try this with the TVC its very effective.
rollo
Hi again,
Well, checking the net about Ebony, the wood, here is what I found.
Taken from "The WoodBox"
"Wood Description:
The various forms of ebony can vary from a pure black (gaboon ebony from Africa) to a dark chocolate brown with dramatic black or slightly grey and beige
streaks (macassar ebony from Indonesia). Larger picture above is the macassar ebony wood.
Today it is getting more difficult to get the pure black ebonys, and instrument makers are sometimes resorting to dying the wood to improve colour consistency.
Weight:
approximately 65+ lbs per cubic foot
Finishing:
The wood is very dense thus no fillers are necessary. It finishs to a beautiful sheen, with limited effort.
Machining:
Must have sharp tools, dulling will occur, but cuts easily with a bandsaw and turns beautifully on a lathe. Sanding works quite well with power tools,
but next to impossible with hand sanding (forget the cheap sandpaper, it won't touch it). Burning can happen if you exert too much pressure on a dull sanding
belt, so start with a fresh one.
If you are using it as an inlay with other open pored woods, you do have to be a bit careful because the fine dust can accumulate in the open grain and
alter the colour of the contrasting wood... make sure you use a compressor and blow off the surface well, prior to finishing ... rub with a solvent first
to check...
Fine Dust can be an irrantant so WEAR a mask!"
So there you have it.
Regards,
Ray