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- Jan 14, 2011
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- Gillette, Wyo.
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- Halfbiass...Electron Herder and Backass Woof
Well then ...get those 4739'S outta there and get the sockets in and ready ..
Well then ...get those 4739'S outta there and get the sockets in and ready ..
Nope, it definetly comes from the 2000 ...
Well then ...get those 4739'S outta there and get the sockets in and ready ..
In the tone controls too Joe..
Seems that I recall that this preamp relies on some screw connections from the board to the chassis to establish a ground for the chassis. Are all the board screws in place? Have you replaced C40 and C41? This pre just uses bulk unregulated voltages, no multistage regulators such as other preamps have. This preamp relies on the PSRR of the OP amps for hum and noise rejection. Not a great plan for a preamp.
Make sure the center tap of the transformer secondary is well connected.
You have hum on all inputs or just on some? Do you have AC safety ground connections on any components in your system that might be causing ground loops?
Why??
Mmmm I get it....With a spectrum analyzer yes...you would have to tune the scope to the hum frequency to find it......
Because I would have thought seeing the hum thing on the scope...???
Not really. If its a hum, its usually going to be line frequency or double line frequency, so 50 or 100 hz in your part of the world. If that is clean on the scope and you get a nice flat line out of it, it shouldn't be humming. It really does sound more like grounding issues than some actual fault within the unit. Open grounds will make for a 50 hz hum.
have you (carefully)scoped it when the 2 components are connected together?
Joe, I haven't had the idea to scope one one of the too output while the other is connected to the amp. Is it what you suggest?
Mmm. That was my first idea, the thing is that I scoped it only from 1000 HZ and above, I guess that if the hum is at a (much) lower frequency I maybe can't see it on my shit** scope ....?
I'll give it a try tomorrow morning.
Anything will read 50 hz unless you have a high pass filter or something on it. Might have to wind the sweep speed down a bit so it shows up decently though. Try somewhere between 2 and 10 ms/div. If its a CRT type, you'll probably be seeing flicker as it retraces. You may also need to turn down the volts/div adjustment to read it.