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#1
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Hum issues on transformer output preamp
This is a strange one.
I eventually got round to putting together a preamp based on the transformers and PCB I bought a while ago. I've kept it pretty much as standard that way with the only mod being JC's one to attenuate the output to give a gain of 3x, i did this by splitting the grid leak to second stage grid into 2 x 470k and connecting the 0.1uF cap to the top of the divider. this is done by putting a resistor in place of the wire link as per Johns info. There's also a Third party remote control board in place but this can be isolated which i did as part of the diagnosis, and a straight feed to the Volume control inserted. (Alps RK271 50k). So everything connected up, fed with 270V from the regulated PSU. Voltages check out, it's drawing around 28mA HT which I think is about right? The voltages are a little bit lower than the book but that seems to require 300V HT although the Circuit diagram shows the Ht as 250V. Heaters are of course 6.3V Regulated DC. Ok so regulated HT therefore I expect no PSU hum. PSU ground lifted from mains /chassis earth by use of 100R lift resistor. The issue seems to be a Hum loop related to the mains earth. On a WD88VA power amp there is audible if quite low level hum as soon as the pre is plugged in to it. On my normally silent hum wise SE EL84 amp it goes into orbit. None of my other preamps do this. The SE hums really bad even with the power off, but as soon as I disconnect the umbilical power lead it reverts back to silence. I noticed that touching any of the metal chassis or earth points also causes a bit of hum, this surely shouldnt happen. I checked the input phonos, they arent the insulated sort so to eliminate them I rigged an input socket that was isolated from the chassis, thinking if that fixed it I'd simply go and buy a set of insulated phonos. But its just the same, as soon as the umbilical is connected, even powered down it starts to hum like a demented bee. Checked and rechecked the wiring. All measures well and looks ok. No obvious hum loops. I tried an earth lift resistor here too, no effect. So it brings me to the point of scratching my head. There HAS to be an answer, it HAS to be something fairly obvious. At least I would think so. Now, of the few things I havent checked out or altered, one is the isolated transformer secondaries I'm wondering if contrary to logic, the hum loop is to do with the cold ie earthy end of the output not being referenced to ground? Much is made of the Pre3 having an isolated output to eliminate Hum loops and I was rather hoping that would be the case. It has to be a loop. I didnt use screened cable from the input to the volume pot and from the volume pot to the input on the board but if it was hum pickup caused by that then disconnecting the umbilical wouldnt affect it and it does. At line level and with no mains transformer fields in the vicinity, screening doesnt have any real effect, certainly on the CF and other preamps it hasnt caused hum. I'll give it a go but I know it'll still show the fault. I have heard in the past of people having all manner of problems with transformer output preamps and I'm wondering if it's going to be worth the bother. However I want to get it right. For the record its built in a modified early WD HD3 case which I believe was one of the original prototypes from back in the day. There's got to be a logical reason thats staring me in the face. Ah well its going away for a month or 3 this weekend as on Monday the builders start and the audio kit will be boxed/bagged up and in protective custody. A. |
#2
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Re: Hum issues on transformer output preamp
Andy, I had this very issue with Pre II, what happens if you remove just one interconnecting plug from your pre to power amp, left or right dose it go silent ?, and as soon as you reconnect the hum returns. BOB
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#3
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Re: Hum issues on transformer output preamp
^^^ +1
And what happens if you remove the earth wire from the mains plug? |
#4
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Re: Hum issues on transformer output preamp
You could get a shock or worse, you die . Bob
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#5
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Re: Hum issues on transformer output preamp
I did think about removing the mains plug earth, but it's not a fix really and it seems my IEC leads have moulded plugs anyway. There is obviously a fault inside the new build and I just have to trace it.
I tried altering the run of the signal ground as one run right back to the main star at the earth terminal as I would on a hard wire build but none of it makes any difference. Bob I tried that trick removing one plug but it makes not a jot of difference. I subbed my CF pre using the same PSU and everything went back to its normal silent background. It must be something fundamental that I have missed as if there was an inherent issue with the transformer output design we'd know of it here. I'm going to leave it be for a while. Lifes going to get very busy at home. If I can't get to the bottom of it. I'll swap the aikido CF board over into the big case as a known quantity and use the full remote facilities. I had wondered about the remote control board and input relay board but after disconnecting the power (6.3V off the heaters) and also bypassing the relay input board, the hum was still very present. It's got to be a hum loop, just a question of tracing it. Ok packing it all away, i may have a word with JC at Tonbridge for some pointers. A. |
#6
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Re: Hum issues on transformer output preamp
Another look and I tried the solid state mitsubishi power amp, this is double insulated so has no mains earth. The hum is very low on this, but still there and I think theres a bit of mileage now in new input sockets and better screening of the input signal wires as I suspect a small internal loop.
Now heres a thing, I disconnected the mains earth temporarily at the power plug of the PSU and the hum got way worse! I'd previously noticed that putting a finger on any earthed points in the preamp caused a hum, again this is an anomaly I think. Finally i did a ear to the speaker check on the WD88VA which is as good as silent on the RH channel and the residual hum on LH that I never got rid of is usually so low as to be only just discernible with lug ole to speaker. I usually do this with a shorting plug or the quiet preamp in the inputs. Well, blow me if there isn't a raised level of hum on that too. I have a hunch that the ring main upstairs where the kit now resides may have a fault on it. So on monday at 9am the electrician is coming to isolate all the first floor electrics prior to the work starting in march on ripping the roof and floors out. I shall have a word with him as I wonder when we had the consumer unit replaced and moved to a more convenient location, if the sparks that did that bodged it. I found out a few months later when we were getting a new kitchen in that he'd done an illegal install with insufficient paperwork and we had to shell out for a new set of tails in from the meter as he'd put undersized ones in, no doubt to save effort threading them under the floorboards. I now wonder if the reconnection wasnt done right and theres an earth fault on the upstairs ring main. We have 4 separate rings in this house which is historical due to previous extensions and moving kitchens etc. That and a couple of spurs for odd appliances needing their own fused supply. Anyway I will have a word with the lad, he can do a full check as well as the new mains upstairs post refurb. We'd decided on running a completely new ring and spurs anyway as it will work out cheaper than trying to trace the old wiring and expend it round etc. So I hope it will all check out. Do any forumistas who have a working knowledge of domestic wiring think my suspicions may be correct in that I'm chasing a fault that lies outside the equipment in the household wiring? It'll be a good 3 months before I get back up there so I'll not know till thats done, but I will at least have a nice supply for the A/V gear with a bank of sockets to supply all the bits n bobs along with concealed ethernet cables for the digital stuff and a co ax run for a bigger FM Aerial so the troughie will come out of hiding. I feel a bit better in that the hum issues are probably easily sorted out. I may still ditch the transformer output but a quick hour or so suggests that theres something to the sound, it seems more gutsy yet full of the HF and midrange detail that I like. Worth persevering with, I may even get Matthews control board just because its probably a bit more smoother in operation than the ebay job. I cant use the WD relay board because the holes dont match up but thats no big deal wiring a relay board up isnt that hard to do all said and done. A. |
#7
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Re: Hum issues on transformer output preamp
House wiring is simple Andy, as long as it's all fitted tight, I doubt that your problem is with the mains, going back to your mention of the Aikido, I adore mine, no hum at all, very easy to live with, I do use Mullard E88CC gold pin tubes that seam to give a little extra, it all lives in a Pre III case with remote volume from Nick Lucas, this and my Phono have individual power supply's now both with regulated HT, I have had Pre II and the less said about it the better, I also had a Pre III that was a instant like, but weeks later it was too much, it became tiring to listen to, the Aikido is just lovely, the Phono is completely stock, I did try some of those Russian capacitors that Black Stuart harps on about and found no difference at all , I returned to the orange drops and they are still in there. Bob
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#8
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Re: Hum issues on transformer output preamp
biker,
I'm very glad you survived the dis-connection test... I would not have been able to face Bob ever again. Good luck with the building 'stuff' ehy. Alan |
#9
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Re: Hum issues on transformer output preamp
Quote:
Yeah I think I can see why you thought pre3 might get fatiguing, it's a very forward sound presentation, plenty of colour in it. I will see how I get on with it and if in time I prefer the ACF It's easy enough to swap it back as they are in different cases. Anyway Everythings now in mothballs as of today, the last bit of fiddling suggests i can tweak the hum down a bit on the preamp, it's not intrusive at normal levels. All my power amps are showing increased background hum levels when plugged in upstairs compared with the downstairs ring mains, this does suggest to me a wiring fault. Hopefully academic as there will be a brand new ring main upstairs and it will be pretty much supplying nothing other than the AV gear as the bathroom across the landing will have its own separate supply for things like shower and underfloor heating. Then I'll have another crack at things. Andy. |
#10
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Re: Hum issues on transformer output preamp
I had another look at this today.
I replaced the Phono sockets with proper insulated ones that isolate their outers from the chassis to eliminate any risk of a ground loop that way. Plugged it into the lounge audio system via its aux socket and turned the wick up full to use it like a power amp. If anything the hum is even worse, very loud 50Hz hum. Wiring checked, and I can not see where I may have fouled up. Transformer wiring just like the manual shows. Checked the aerth/ground runs, I cant see any deviation from the manual in terms of the Pcb grounding and signal grounding. Switched the psu off and left it connected to the mains, the hum actually got louder Disconnected Umbilical.................. Silence. So I thinks maybe my PSU is faulty. But all checks out. I pulled out the ACF Cathode follower preamp/buffer stage. Plugged it all in with the same PSU. Total silence in the background. So the issue is somewhere in the transformer output preamp, but I can't see how hum is coupling in. I am at the stage of ripping the transformers out and hoying them in the bin and reverting to the old faithful CF output job. I want a bit of gain but that is dead easy to achieve and I have plenty of circuit choices to choose from. I have eliminated the possibility of the remote control electronics being the culprit by the simple expedient of disconnecting it fully and hardwiring the volume control to an input. And still it hums. It's either something simple, or the transformers are coupling into an external hum field somewhere, in which case the whole thing is a waste of time. I'm very disappointed right now but at a complete loss as to where to start. I did do the gain mod of inserting a potential divider after the interstage coupling capacitor, using a resistor in place of the link wire, I simply split the 1meg grid leak into 2 x 470k to give a halving of the signal into the output valve, this gives 3x gain which is about right for my needs. If thats where the problem lies, maybe due to an impedance mismatch? it's a relatively easy fix. Otherwise I cant see where to look. A |