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case D with the input shorted is very, very quiet.... I'vetried a few.
My tubes are a Telefunken 12au7 and a Brimar 12ax7. I did try a setof Sovteks in their place, with no difference in measurements (below)or sound. The rectifier is a Sovtek, and I don't have another to try.
... ought the chassis of the Chime have continuity with theRCA shields? This persists when I remove the "earth" lead from thechime board. The RCAs are clearly insulated away, but the USBconnector likely is not.
The line-level output of the Chime was a bit more noisy (<1-3mV peakto peak--I can't accurately measure very low values), and exhibited astrange DC drift of +/- 60mV (120mV p/p) at slow (1-2 second)timescales, with intermittent peaks off the 200mV scale I happened touse for this.
(Incidentally, given that this tweeter unbolts, exposing the voicecoil which is wrapped around the diaphragm, are there ways to patch upthe split wire so I might limp along until new speakers or luck infinding a new tweeter?)
I ... had tried termination of the RCA into a 100kresistor. There was no apparent difference in measurements betweenterminated or not.
I mean to go back and remove components ahead of the capacitor to start to get a closer idea of what is going on.
I've also since given balanced input a try, connecting the RCA to pins 2 and 3, and leaving 1 disconnected. I tried with the amp ground lifted with a cheater plug, and not, as well as combinations of the ground lift switch on the amp (which shouldn't matter here). In all cases, there's a rather substantial hum (some cases more than others), and the white noise remains clearly audible.
I did at one point try connecting *only* the center pin and not the RCA ground to the amplifier. The hiss persisted with no apparent change. Of course, the ground in the Chime could still be noisy, perhaps if it were not tied well to the signal ground. Any noise relative to the powerline ground would probably also occur on the signal line.